Welcome

I am a political scientist studying the intersection of international security and the digital economy. I am currently a Technology and International Security postdoctoral fellow at the University of California Institute for Global Cooperation and Conflict. My fellowship in Washington, DC is sponsored by the Center for Global Security Research at Livermore National Laboratory and National Security and International Studies Office at Los Alamos National Laboratory. In 2024, I will start as an assistant professor at the Georgia Tech School of Public Policy.

My research leverages novel data sources — from forensic malware analysis, to internet topography measurements, to texts mapping bureaucratic delegation. I examine issues such as how weaponized interdependence and international security shape data flows, how data flows promote regulatory cooperation, and how states develop institutions to respond to digital threats and harness growth. Prior to beginning my doctorate, I was was a research associate for national security at the Council on Foreign Relations. My research is published at Public Opinion Quarterly and currently under review at multiple journals. I received my BA from New York University, and AM and PhD from Harvard University