Curriculum Vitae

I am a PhD candidate in Political Science at the University of Frankfurt. Before beginning my doctoral studies I graduated in Empirical Democracy Studies at the University of Mainz. I also hold undergraduate degrees in Political Science and Communication Science from the University of Mainz. Besides my academic work I also engage in political education, working as a partial free lancer for the state parliament of Rhineland-Palatinate.

I am fascinated by theory-driven quantitative social science and hold undergraduate degrees in Political Science and Communication Science. Currently, I am working as a doctoral researcher at the University of Frankfurt. My main research interests are centred around coalition politics, the links between political and economic (in-)equality, radicalism, political communication, and media systems. Below you will find a summary of my CV. The full CV is available as a PDF in English and German. I use Nick Strayer’s datadrivencv R package for building it.


  • 2024 Doctoral Researcher at the Chair of Education Policy/Political Socialiazation Research
    • University of Frankfurt | Head: Prof. Julian Garritzmann
  • 2022–2024 Research Assistant at the Chair of Comparative Politics
    • University of Mainz | Head: Prof. Armin Schäfer
  • 2021–2024 Research Assistant at the Chair of Political Sociology/German Politics
    • University of Mainz | Head: Prof. Kai Arzheimer
  • 2023 Research Assistant at the GerCaMP Project1
    • Coordinator: Dr. Lea Elsässer

  • 2024– PhD Candidate Political Science | University of Frankfurt
  • 2021–2024 M.A. Empirical Democracy Research | University of Mainz
  • 2018–2021 B.A. Communication Science | University of Mainz
  • 2016–2021 B.A. Political Science | University of Mainz

  • 2019– Tour Guide at the Parliament of Rhineland-Palatinate
  • 2019–2020 Journalistic Internship at Regional Television News of SAT.1

  1. An initial presentation of the data can be found here. These are the slides presented by Armin Schäfer as a part of the Eugen Kogon Lecture. ↩︎