ABOUT ME
- SJD student at Harvard Law School
- Affiliate at the Berkman Klein Center for Internet and Society
- Kennedy-Sinclair Fellow visiting Cambridge University (UK) in the Fall
My doctoral thesis explores the legal and moral obligations of information gatekeepers such as Facebook and Google, considering them as sites of contestation, where new interests and forms of social organization demand for a reconfiguration of individual rights, entitlements, and duties. My other projects span widely into digital rights, intellectual property and antitrust, data protection and AI. I have recently worked on papers on the role of consent as a justificatory tool for harmful online practices, on constitutional aspects of fake news, on the regulation of mergers and acquisitions in the third party tracking sector, and am currently focusing on the notion of control, on the overlaps of new technologies and environmental concerns, on the role of moral philosophy in technology policy.
Amongst other things, last year I was a Eugene P. Beard Fellow at the Edmond J. Safra Center for Ethics, and taught a course at Harvard Law School with Lawrence Lessig and Joshua Tan entitled "Governing Virtual Worlds."
Prior to starting a doctorate, I was a lawyer at a magic circle firm in London and Brussels, focusing on intellectual property disputes, EU and antitrust law. In the recent past, I also worked for an LA-based company in film distribution and sales and volunteered for Privacy International in London.
I hold an LLB (Hons) degree from University College London, an LLM from Harvard Law School and a Diploma in IP Law and Practice from Oxford University. I am qualified to practice law in New York, USA, and England and Wales, UK.
Watercolors, pottery & climbing are my current favorite non academic pursuits. I also like jogging, yoga, swimming & sking.

