I work at the intersection of legal philosophy, social epistemology, and the theory of action. My research examines the structure and normativity of legal practices, with a focus on how legal knowledge is produced, shared, and justified within social and institutional contexts. I aim to bridge analytic rigor with an appreciation of law’s embeddedness in collective reasoning and practical life. My current work explores extra-legal compulsion in international law, the nature of jurisprudential disagreement, and the epistemic conditions under which legal understanding is possible.