I am a maritime and transport scholar who approaches the study of global mobility with both analytical depth and practical insight. I explore how shipping networks, ports, logistics chains, and transport infrastructures interconnect, focusing on the operational, technological, and policy factors that shape their efficiency and reliability. I see these systems as living networks, where decisions in one part can ripple across the entire supply chain.
While my work is grounded in research, I always consider the practical implications of maritime and transport systems. From cargo routing and fleet management to multimodal transport strategies, I aim to connect theory with the challenges and opportunities faced by the industry.
A central part of my work is providing research topics that inspire rigorous inquiry. I design directions that are methodologically sound, analytically meaningful, and clearly scoped. These topics often explore sustainable shipping practices, port efficiency, technological innovations in transport, risk management, and policy evaluation. I prioritize questions that encourage critical thinking and produce actionable insights.
My work draws on principles from engineering, logistics, economics, environmental science, and data analytics. This multidimensional approach allows me to provide nuanced research topics that reflect the interconnected realities of maritime and transport systems.