I am an applied economist working at the intersection of development and labor economics.
Currently a consultant at the World Bank, I work on several expert assignments in Tunisia and Djibouti, covering migration dynamics, gender inequalities in the labor market, and the targeting of cash transfers. I am also an associate researcher at the Joint Research Unit Development and Societies (UMR D&S, Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne University - French National Research Institute for Sustainable Development) and have been qualified for a Maître de Conférences in Economics (CNU section 05, 2025–2029).
My ongoing research focuses on climate migration: how climate shocks shape internal and international labor migration decisions, and how international migration policies influence these decisions. In parallel, I extend my work on job polarization and wage inequality by examining the impact of artificial intelligence on task and skill demand in developing countries, using an original job-posting database collected through web scraping.