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About

Born and raised in the Brazilian Amazon, I am currently a researcher working at the intersection of International Law, International Relations, and Global Governance. My research focuses on climate governance, global health, international institutional design, and critical approaches to law and world politics, especially from critical decolonial perspectives.

I am currently pursuing a PhD in International Relations at the University of Brasília, where I study the relationship between health and the international climate regime, with emphasis on fragmented governance, unequal institutional capacities, and the political production of vulnerability. I hold an MA in International Relations from the same university, with research on global governance for digital health in Brazil, combining risk analysis, interoperability, and cooperation.

My broader research agenda examines climate and health governance through critical, comparative, and interdisciplinary lenses. I am particularly interested in TWAIL, constructivism, international legal fragmentation, access to transnational justice, digital transformation in legal cooperation, and the role of institutions in reproducing or challenging global asymmetries. I also work with comparative and configurational methodologies applied to law and international studies.

climate changeclimate justiceClimate litigationglobal healthInternational Cooperation

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