A geographer with a PhD in urban planning, she teaches at the Paris School of Urban Planning and conducts research on territorial inequalities and working-class neighborhoods in France, intertwining territorial public action and the practices of the residents who shape them. To do so, she uses qualitative methods.
Her thesis, defended last year, focuses on policies to support business creation in priority neighborhoods. She questions the principle of equal opportunity advocated in entrepreneurship support in urban policy by studying individuals' access to entrepreneurial resources offered by local institutional actors and their effects on their capacity for action. Interdisciplinary in nature, she brings critical management sciences into dialogue with urban planning and social geography.
She continues to focus on issues of territorial inequality, and wishes to link them to the notion of care and develop links between the worlds of research and civil society. In this context, last year she co-founded an association called La Cabane de la recherche (The Research Cabin) with fellow doctoral students and young doctors.
Before joining LATTS, she was a member of the Mosaïques team at LAVUE at Paris Nanterre University, where she participated in the "Justice and Inequalities" research area.