About
I am currently a PhD student in psychology at the University of Toronto, studying under Dr. Felix Cheung at the Population Well-Being Lab. I hold a B.A. in psychology and philosophy from York University (Toronto, Canada), an M.A. in applied linguistics from the University of Nottingham (Ningbo, China), and an M.Sc. in the cognitive neuroscience of language from the Basque Center on Cognition, Brain and Language at the University of the Basque Country (Donostia/San Sebastián, Spain).
Broadly, my research interests include how political processes and events affect the well-being of populations globally. More specifically, my research includes two streams: (i) empirical work examining how processes and specific events (joining political unions, wars, conflicts, etc.) affect the well-being of populations across the globe; (ii) theoretical work on how and why nation states, especially authoritarian regimes, manage the well-being of their populations.
Poster Links
Links