Lawyer and doctoral candidate in law at the Universidad Diego Portales, where she also works as a researcher for the Procedural Reforms and Litigation Program. Her training includes specialization in gender, human rights and public policy, with studies at Diego Portales University (UDP), Autonomous University of Barcelona (UAB) and the University of Chile (UCh). She has developed several academic works focused on access to justice for women victims of gender violence, analysis of sentences with a gender perspective and studies on secondary victimization in the criminal process. She is currently working on her doctoral thesis entitled “The role of women's autonomy in the face of gender violence: an empirical study on the role of survivors of attempted femicide in their judicial processes in Chile”, under the direction of Professor Lidia Casas Becerra. The project aims to understand how women survivors exercise their autonomy within the judicial system, exploring the tensions between agency and institutional protection, based on a qualitative study of court cases and in-depth interviews. This research is part of the work of the Millennium Nucleus Data Justa, contributing to critical reflections on the state’s production and use of data in contexts of serious human rights violations.
