Mapping the intersection of hybrid warfare, international law, and geopolitics.
Based between Poznań and The Hague, I study Political Science while working on research that bridges the gap between legal frameworks and emerging threats.
My work spans hybrid warfare analysis, the application of International Humanitarian Law in the cyber-domain, and how space-based evidence can support humanitarian action in conflict zones.
Before The Hague, I spent four years as a Councillor on the Youth City Council of Poznań, advising on youth policy, climate strategy, and civic engagement.
The grey zone between peace and war. Disinformation campaigns, proxy conflicts, cyber operations, and the states that weaponise ambiguity.
How satellite imagery, open-source intelligence, and AI are redefining what evidence means in war crimes documentation and humanitarian response.
Can the Geneva Conventions survive the digital domain? Exploring where IHL holds, where it breaks, and what a new legal framework might look like.
Decoding the decisions of states, institutions, and actors shaping the international order with a focus on Central & Eastern Europe.
Climate change as a threat multiplier. How environmental stress becomes political instability, resource conflict, and displacement.
Who controls the algorithm controls the narrative. Examining algorithmic sovereignty, AI in legal systems, and the politics of digital infrastructure.
Long-form writing on hybrid warfare, IHL, and digital humanitarianism.
Curating the noise of hybrid conflict. Daily signals from the grey zone.
> Digital Humanitarianism
> Geneva Convention for the Digital Domain
> Algorithmic Sovereignty