Korina (Kyriaki) Pavlidou is a transdisciplinary researcher, writer, and assistant professor of law and bioethics. She holds a PhD in Law from Freie Universität Berlin and has specialised in philosophy of law and human rights at the Aristotle University of Thessaloniki and University College London. Korina has held visiting fellowships at the Swiss Institute of Comparative Law in Lausanne and the lucernaiuris Institut in Lucerne and is a member of the Nomos Centre for International Research on Law, Culture and Power at Jagiellonian University.
Drawing on new materialisms, critical feminisms, and non-representational epistemologies, her work engages with exstitutional knowledges and public philosophy practices across disciplines and centres in Berlin and Athens. Korina is also collaborating with scholars across the UK to bring together a research group on Law and Process that explores interfaces between processual thinking and practice, the philosophy of biology, and critical studies.
In her ongoing research, Korina explores what she articulates as a process-oriented ontology at the intersection of law, mycophilosophy, and theory of individuation, a project she will further pursue at the Westminster Law & Theory Lab with a focus on trans-dividuation across the social and life sciences. During her fellowship, Korina will also present Processing Process – No EnD In Site, a collaborative curatorial project based on her conceptual framework and hosted at Hypha Studios (City of London). Bringing together a group of transdisciplinary artists including the Lab’s founding Co-Director, Andreas Philippopoulos-Mihalopoulos, the exhibition presents and expands research that will be further developed during her time at the Lab.
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