Curious and ambitious, I am passionate about the intersection of creativity, strategy, and innovation. I am particularly interested in how design and storytelling can drive meaningful change, and I thrive in dynamic, international environments that foster learning, collaboration, and new perspectives.




Reimagining Women’s Safety is a project that challenges the ways women’s safety is communicated and understood in contemporary society. It examines the everyday advice, institutional guidance, and public messaging that encourage women to modify their behaviour in order to stay safe. By shifting attention to these overlooked forms of communication, the project reveals how responsibility for safety is placed on individuals rather than on the systems and conditions that produce risk.
The project combines an interactive website and an immersive audio installation. The website, REDLINE, collects and annotates real safety advice directed at women, exposing recurring patterns of vigilance and self-regulation through a system of red-line interventions. Alongside this, a layered audio experience immerses visitors in the internal thoughts of women navigating public space, transforming familiar environments into spaces shaped by awareness, precaution, and uncertainty.
Our BA Media and Communications programme provides an academic, creative and critical understanding of the media for roles in a variety of creative industries and backgrounds. By the end of our Media and Communications degree, you’ll know how to produce creative content across different kinds of media, including writing, camera use, sound recording and post-production/editing. The course supports students in developing a broad portfolio of independent critical and creative outputs, and to explore how their own practice relates to the real-world media and creative industries.
See further details on our prospectus page.