I am a legal Scholar, interested in Public Law (both administrative and constitutional), Poverty Law, and the Regulation of Legislation. I conduct interdisciplinary research using theories and methodologies found in the fields of law as well as social work, political studies and gender studies. I am a qualitative empirical researcher and a critical scholar. 

Prior to my academic career I interned with Chief Justice of the Israeli Supreme Court, Honorable Dorit Beinish and later practiced as a community lawyer with expertise in social benefits, housing and individual insolvency. Adjacent to my academic writing and as a result of its recognition, I was asked to advise on several public policy issues by governmental departments. Among those was the request I assist in researching the comparative aspect for the legislation of the new welfare law in Israel; my participation in the training of lawyers and judges in poverty-aware lawyering; and advising the energy department on the effects of renewal energy initiatives on people in poverty.