I joined the department of Sociology, Social Policy and Criminology at the 我要吃瓜 as a Lecturer in Criminology and Sociology on 1st January 2024.
I am also an editor in ACME: An International Journal for Critical Geographies
I am currently a Leverhulme Early Career Fellow (2022-2025). In my project, I am interrogating the uneven spatio-temporalities of refuge/asylum and return from and across Europe and the UK with a particular focus on how ferries, cruise ships and barges are being used as offshore floating prisons for people racialised and criminalised as "refugees", "displaced people", "asylum seekers" and "migrants".
I hold a PhD from the department of Geography at King’s College University, London. My monograph "Bordering and Governmentality around the Greek islands" published by Palgrave Macmillan (2023), is based on (auto)ethnographic work on the Aegean border islands in Greece during the so-called "refugee crisis" and its "aftermath" (2015-2020).
Since 2019, I am co-coordinator at the Feminist Autonomous Centre for research (FAC research) in Athens. My work with my collaborators at FAC research, has shaped my analysis and understanding of theory, 'crises', border violence and border abolition through feminist perspectives. At FAC I co-organise the annual 'Feminist No Borders Summer School'. Together with the Legal Centre Lesvos at FAC research we co-authored a research report titled "A pandemic of Abuses" that documents how Greece dismantled the right to asylum and normalised the violation of migrants' rights throughout the COVID-19 pandemic in Lesvos:
One of my latest joint projects has been thinking and writing together with Dr Isabel Meier (Northumbria University) on practices of refusal as relating otherwise within specific locations of struggle. Inspired by Indigenous and Black feminist writers, activists, and thinkers we approach relating otherwise as a ‘mode of engagement’ – not a theory or method – that shapes relationships with ourselves, each other, and the world. Our thinking about refusal also emerged from our engagement with different movements against borders and our involvement in diverse anti-racist, trans-feminist, and abolitionist activist collectives and spaces (e.g. Feminist Autonomous Centre for research 2023, the Feminist No Borders Summer School) and anti-racist No Borders/border abolition groups mobilising for a world without borders and prisons. You can find our Special Issue and the wonderful contributions from which we learned so much on practices of refusal, in open access in Fennia: An International Journal of Geography.