Computer scientist. Political scientist. Researcher of techno-nationalism, semiconductors, and the digital economy.
I am a computer scientist who became a political scientist who became an economist, not by switching tracks, but by refusing to pick one.
My work sits where code, capital, and policy collide: semiconductor industrial policy, techno-nationalism, electric-vehicle supply chains, and the financial markets that price all of it.
I research, teach, build, and represent. The questions I care about don't sit inside one discipline, so I don't either.
Most days you'll find me between a paper, a lecture hall, and a coffee in the 7th district. I'm happiest when a problem refuses to stay inside one field.
A line that runs from a 2015 software apprenticeship in a tractor company to founding a foundation, lecturing statistics, and presenting in Paris in 2026.