The Dossier

Analyzing systems. Engineering care.


About the Author

My professional identity is driven by a singular inquiry: How can we engineer systems of care that are as architecturally sound as they are deeply compassionate? Based in Canada, I am a researcher and advocate navigating the intersection of human service and intelligence analysis. My work is dedicated to the development of Forensic Empathy—a framework that bridges the gap between the macro-analysis of systemic vulnerabilities and the micro-dynamics of human stabilization.

The Origin: From Survivor to Scholar

My commitment to Social Work is not merely academic; it is deeply personal. My path was forged by my own experience navigating the aftermath of sexual assault—a journey that revealed the profound gaps in our current social and legal infrastructures. I witnessed firsthand how systems designed to protect can often feel cold, fragmented, and architecturally ill-equipped to handle the nuance of human trauma.

This experience crystallized my purpose. I realized that while the law serves as the essential skeleton of society, it requires the pulse of empathy to become truly restorative. I chose to pursue a Master of Social Work (MSW) not just to provide support, but to re-engineer the systems themselves. I am driven to ensure that the "duty to accommodate" is not just a legal requirement, but a structural reality for every survivor of systemic failure.

The MSW Path: Beyond the 4.0

I approach the field of Social Work with the discipline of an analyst. My academic record—marked by a consistent ~4.0 GPA and placement on the President’s Honour List—is a testament to my belief that high-stakes advocacy requires high-level rigor.

Currently pursuing an Honours Bachelor of Crime and Intelligence Analysis at Seneca Polytechnic, I am training to identify the "logic" in societal suffering. By integrating pattern recognition and strategic forecasting into social work theory, I aim to move the field from a reactive model of "crisis management" to a proactive model of "systemic resilience."

The Digital Lab

This website serves as my digital lab. It is a space for the radical transparency of the research process as I build toward a future where justice is not just a concept, but a delivered form of care. Through my research streams in Macro-Pattern Analysis and The Logic of Stabilization, I am documenting the evolution of a new standard for the scholar-practitioner.


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Professional Boundary StatementI am an Honours student; I am not a licensed clinician, doctor, or legal professional. The reflections on this site are academic in nature and do not constitute professional advice. In an emergency, please contact 9-8-8 or your local emergency services.