Transitional Justice & Recovery
How societies pursue accountability and repair after mass violence — and why some attempts heal while others quietly reopen the wound.
My work lives where genocide & mass-atrocity prevention, international law, and transitional justice meet. The throughline: violence isn’t a single event — it’s a process that starts long before history records it, and keeps going long after. Prevention means reading that whole arc.

Six threads I keep pulling — far more tangled in real life than this tidy grid lets on.
How societies pursue accountability and repair after mass violence — and why some attempts heal while others quietly reopen the wound.
The role of local actors and ordinary communities in building peace from the ground up — often long before, and after, international attention arrives.
Reading atrocity through culture, identity & lived experience — because the numbers alone never explain how neighbors become enemies.
How what we remember — and how we choose to tell it — shapes whether violence is prevented or quietly rehearsed for next time.
The uncomfortable questions of bystanders, enablers & shared accountability — the parts of the story most of us would rather not sit with.
Using data and emerging tools to read the early-warning signs and anticipate atrocity before it escalates.
Tap any card for the full detail, links & media.
A comparative case study reading atrocity as an adaptive process, not a single moment — applied to settler colonialism in the U.S.
An interactive, map-driven comparative study that lets a non-specialist follow academic rigor as a scrollable narrative.
My Hood College Tischer Scholar thesis on the legal architecture of genocide and the efficacy of the Convention.
Celebrating non-violence and interfaith peacebuilding with the International Center for Religion & Diplomacy.
An interview with producer Nina Jacobson on The Hunger Games as a story of resistance, for Freedom House.
On artistic freedom and political imprisonment in Cuba — written and placed at Freedom House.
Presenting the work — and learning, every time, how to make heavy research land for a room of real people. Tap to watch.
Presented at the College of William & Mary Graduate Research Symposium.
Presented at the Binghamton University Philosophy Graduate Conference (SPEL series).
An invited reflection at the frank Conference, University of Florida.
Presented at the Maryland Collegiate Honors Conference.
Panelist at the Maryland Collegiate Honors Conference.
Auschwitz Institute for the Prevention of Genocide & Mass Atrocities Fellow.
Concentration in Conflict Resolution; minors in Nonprofit & Civic Engagement.
Honors-program scholar; recognition in political science & international studies.
Honor societies: Pi Sigma Alpha · Sigma Iota Rho · Sigma Delta Pi · Phi Theta Kappa
Essays, campaigns & data stories — the research, translated.