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My book-length work examines how crises are governed, how power and incentives shape humanitarian response, and why systems designed for urgency often normalize permanence. These books sit alongside my public writing and analysis, and reflect a long-form engagement with the political economy of crisis and humanitarian governance.


The Economy of Crises


Forthcoming

The Economy of Crises explores how humanitarian emergencies evolve into self-sustaining systems. Drawing on years of experience across crisis and policy contexts, the book examines how funding structures, institutional incentives, and accountability gaps shape outcomes in prolonged emergencies.

Rather than focusing on individual failures, the book interrogates the political and economic logics that allow crises to persist — and asks what reform would require if accountability were taken seriously.

SANCTIONED

Forthcoming

SANCTIONED is a reflective and analytical work that examines power, institutional authority, and the human cost of administrative decisions. The book considers what happens when systems designed to uphold order instead expose the limits of internal justice, accountability, and redress. While grounded in lived experience, SANCTIONED situates personal narrative within a broader inquiry into governance, legitimacy, and institutional power.