Conflict and demobilization
How armed actors respond to information, identity, and emotional cues.
I am a postdoctoral researcher affiliated with the University of Ottawa and the Institute for Replication. My work studies conflict, information, demobilization, research reproducibility, and the practical use of AI in social science.
The work combines applied microeconomics with political economy, behavioral mechanisms, and reproducibility checks.
How armed actors respond to information, identity, and emotional cues.
When public attention changes political incentives and strategic behavior.
Replication, robustness, and research workflows that make results easier to trust.
Using AI as a measurable research partner rather than a black-box productivity claim.
Representative papers and projects on how media, identity, institutions, and reproducibility shape social-science claims.
My academic work centers on political economy and development, with a particular focus on conflict, media, crime, and institutions in Colombia. At the Institute for Replication, I help coordinate replication games and contribute to meta-research on how social science evidence is checked, reproduced, and improved.
I also work across applied data science and behavioral economics, including research and analytical work for policy-facing and private-sector settings.
Read the CV summary