I am a Colombian psychologist and PhD candidate in Comparative Gender Studies at Central European University (Vienna). My research examines chemsex as a site where migration, gender, sexuality, race, class, age, and digital infrastructures intersect, shaping belonging, intimacy, and care. Drawing on queer theory, feminist ethnography, and queer migration studies, my dissertation—Chemsex as Borderland Assemblages: An Ethnography of Chemsex Among Queer Latinx Migrants in Granada (Spain)—focuses on how queer Latinx migrants navigate harm reduction, stigma, mental health, and access to support in and beyond app-drug-based sexual (sub)cultures. Methodologically, I combine community-engaged ethnography, in-depth interviews, and critical autoethnography, with an explicit commitment to non-extractive, reciprocal collaboration with community organisations. Alongside academic work, I provide psychodynamic psychotherapy and have experience in community-based sexual health contexts.
