I am a Postdoctoral Research Fellow at Saïd Business School, University of Oxford. My research examines how emerging technologies and business practices can be designed to serve the public good, with particular attention to safety, fairness, responsibility, and access.

A central part of my current work focuses on the safe deployment of artificial intelligence. I study how insurance and guarantee mechanisms can protect individuals, organizations, and wider society from the risks created by increasingly autonomous AI systems. This includes questions about when AI should be allowed to act independently, who should bear responsibility when it fails, and how the benefits of innovation can be realized without leaving people exposed to its potential harms.

I also study socially impactful supply chains and business models. My work considers how organizations can reduce waste, improve access to essential products, and support disadvantaged communities while remaining economically sustainable.

More broadly, my research is motivated by the belief that technological and economic progress should be accompanied by meaningful social protection. I use analytical and data-driven methods to explore how organizations can balance innovation and commercial objectives with responsibility and social welfare.

I hold a PhD in Industrial Engineering and Decision Analytics from the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology. Before joining Oxford, I conducted research at HKUST on the modeling and design of socially responsible business and supply-chain practices.