Welcome!
I am an assistant professor in the Department of Political Science at McGill University. My research and teaching span the sub-fields of comparative politics and quantitative methodology.
I received my PhD in Political Science from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in September 2019, after which I completed a postdoctoral fellowship at Brown University’s Watson Institute for International and Public Affairs. Before attending MIT, I received an MPhil in Politics from Oxford University and worked in Washington D.C. for the House Committee on Science and Technology. I also hold a B.S. from Yale University, where I double majored in Physics and Political Science.
My research focuses on the origins and consequences of sub-state nationalism, exploring how the imagined communities of stateless nations mold actual political attitudes and behaviors. At McGill, I teach courses on nationalism, quantitative and computational methods for political science, and causal inference.