Mississauga, ON, Canada

“Seeking essence beneath complexity — the minimal conditions that allow systems, institutions, and people to flourish.”
I am an interdisciplinary researcher with a background in Law (professional five-year degree with thesis defence) and Business Management (MBA). My work explores how systems shape human well-being, and how institutions can be designed to support human flourishing in efficient and sustainable ways.
My research sits at the intersection of social psychology, philosophy, and systems design. I focus on identifying the minimal conditions that allow individuals, cultures, and systems to thrive. At the core of my work is a simple guiding question:
“What do people truly need to thrive — and how can our systems be redesigned to support that?”
By integrating social sciences, philosophy, and systems thinking, I seek to understand how structures can nurture human potential with dignity and meaning. I approach research as a practice of clarity: removing noise, revealing what matters, and shaping systems that honour life. My approach is deliberately minimal and intentional:
“Reduce complexity until the essence becomes clear.“

Understanding the minimal structural, social, and psychological conditions that support individual and collective thriving. Develop a Minimal Conditions Framework for Human Flourishing, a distilled model of the foundational needs, structures, and relational dynamics required for human potential.

Exploring how institutions can be redesigned for flexibility, dignity, and long-term societal well-being. Analyze how systems succeed and where do they fail.

Investigating how minimalism, Japanese aesthetics, and ethics can guide the creation of systems that nurture life.
When systems are designed to be truly adaptive and self-sustaining, people no longer serve systems; instead, the systems serve them. As human needs evolve, individuals become active creators—shaping, improving, and renewing both themselves and the system. In this process, the role of art and creativity becomes essential, enabling continuous growth and transformation that generate new conditions to flourish. The role of art in human development is vital, cross-disciplinary, and woven through these areas.
Professionally, I have worked across government and large organizations, focusing on digital transformation, public-sector standards, risk governance, innovation, and multi-stakeholder coordination. These experiences fuel my passion for designing systems that reduce friction, eliminate waste, and enhance societal resilience.
Current projects include:
• Working paper on Minimal Conditions for Human Flourishing
• Analytical Study on the Importance of Art in Human Life
• Ikebana-Inspired System Design Framework
• Adaptive Governance for Global Human Well-Being
• Essays and visual frameworks on human needs, systems, and global transformation
I am preparing to pursue a PhD in interdisciplinary fields such as Philosophy, Applied Social Psychology, Global Affairs, Public Policy, or Information Systems. I welcome connections with scholars and programs focused on systems thinking, ethics, governance, human development, sustainability, and cultural studies—especially those embracing innovative approaches to complex societal challenges.
I apply mixed interdisciplinary methods including systems analysis, conceptual modelling, qualitative inquiry, data interpretation, and design thinking — connecting human needs, institutional structures, and process efficiency.
A blend of:
Rooted in:
clarity, reduction, meaning, for human dignity.