Who I am?

? Dr. Zoi Aliozi is a freelance international academic, and scholar-activist, with expertise on human rights, climate justice, and digital advocacy/communications.

➡️ She is a human rights educator, and an award-winning philosopher.

➡️ She has been engaging with climate justice research and activism—while lecturing law, philosophy and cinema.

➡️ Zoi is an inter-disciplinary scholar, with expertise in human rights law, analytic philosophy, climate justice, digital advocacy and distance learning.

➡️ She has a special eye for ‘new tech for good’ (IT, AI, and digital communications) – as well as a deep passion for visual arts and creative media for legal education and philosophy.

? 1️⃣: LLB Law | 2️⃣: Master in Human Rights | 3️⃣: Cert. in Counselling Psychology | 4️⃣: Cert. in Business Administration & Marketing | 5️⃣: Ph.D. in Political Philosophy.

She began her academic journey studying law for her first academic degree (LLB Law, UK, 1998-2003), proceeding to human rights law and philosophy for her master’s studies (Ema, Venice, 2006-7), continued by focusing on philosophy and human rights for her doctoral studies (Ph.D., Rome & Washington DC, 2010-2013), and she served as a postdoctoral researcher in the Irish Centre of Human Rights, at the Law School of the National University of Ireland, Galway (Ireland, 2014-16).

??‍? Since 2016 she’s been engaging with online research and human rights advocacy, campaigning online, and using digital advocacy, digital tools, and online communications channels such as social media to promote campaigns for the 3rd sector. She has spent some years working on app/website development, and in the ‘tech for good’ industry, and she is very interested in AI ethics, and new tech for good.

? Books 2021 ?: Her latest publications include ? ‘Human Rights: A Comparative Approach’ (Eds. Z. Aliozi and K. Chainoglou, Hellenic Academic eBooks, Kallipos, Greece, Oct. 2021), ? ‘Green Criminology: A rights-based approach’, in ‘Green Crimes and International Criminal Law‘ (Ed. R. Paulose, Vernon, USA, April 2021) and ? ‘Diotima’, in The Philosopher Queens (Eds. R. Buxton & L. Whiting, Unbound, UK, Sept. 2020).