I hold a Ph.D. in Philosophical and Social Studies of Science and Technology from the National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM), focusing on genetic technologies and forensic self-organization movements in the context of forced disappearance in Mexico. I have a degree in New Media and Communication Theory from the Carlos III University of Madrid with a joint degree at the School of Economics, and a MA in Contemporary Art History and Visual Culture from the inter-institutional program offered jointly by Universidad Complutense, Autonomous University of Madrid, and Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofìa. My key research questions have remained constant throughout this multidisciplinary trajectory and relate to the ethics and politics of cultural representations of science and technology, with a particular emphasis on their intersections with women's movements and feminist materialisms.