A political theorist by training, my research approaches algorithms and computing from contemporary critical theory, feminist Science and Technology Studies (STS), and Marxist traditions of critique. My dissertation project, titled “Untimely Algorithms: Technology, Political Thought and Futurity” is a methodological contribution to the critical history of algorithms.
Currently, I am completing my PhD in Political Science at Johns Hopkins University and, before that, I received my BA in Philosophy from Reed College. Since 2022, I have also concurrently worked in the tech industry as a full-time researcher at IBM. There, I interact daily with algorithmic systems, observe their design and development, and conduct AI audits using methods from the humanities.
A political theorist by training, my research approaches the politics of algorithms and computing from radical democratic, STS, Marxist and Marxian traditions of critique. My dissertation project, titled “Untimely Algorithms: Technology, Political Thought and Futurity,” is a methodological contribution to the critical history of algorithms.
Currently, I am completing my PhD in Political Science at Johns Hopkins University and, before that, I received my BA in Philosophy from Reed College. Since 2022, I have also concurrently worked in the tech industry as a full-time researcher at IBM. There, I interact daily with algorithmic systems, observe their design and development, and conduct AI audits using methods from the humanities.