ABOUT
I am a Professor of International Relations at the Pontifical Catholic University of São Paulo (PUC-SP), where I teach and conduct research on colonialism, racism, capitalism, and international conflict. I hold a PhD and an MA in International Relations from the San Tiago Dantas Graduate Programme (UNESP/UNICAMP/PUC-SP), and I was a Visiting Researcher at the Department of Development Studies at SOAS, University of London.
My research focuses on Palestine/Israel as a paradigmatic case for understanding settler colonialism, neoliberal governance, and counterinsurgency, while also developing comparative analyses with Latin America and other regions of the Global South. I am particularly interested in how urban space, development policies, and security practices are mobilised to manage populations and suppress resistance.
I am Vice-Leader of the Study Group on International Conflicts (GECI/PUC-SP) and a researcher at the National Institute of Science and Technology for Studies on the United States (INCT-INEU). I have published books, peer-reviewed articles, and book chapters with international publishers and journals, and I regularly contribute to public debates through media appearances, essays, and long-form analysis.