ABOUT

OUR TEAM

ABOUT DAYALIS
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF AND FOUNDER

Dayalis began I, TOO in the midst of one of her most hectic summers. A child of Cuban parents, she has always been interested in how the power of democracy stands with the people and how the interactions between countries can signify a better or worse future for a country's citizens.

She will be writing about the (often confusing) conflicts between countries, human rights violations, feminism, and infringements upon civil rights in our own backyard.

When not reading a book or doing her homework, you will find her mindlessly perusing her social media feeds and promising herself she will start exercising tomorrow. She is currently a senior in high school and wishes to study international relations and human rights law, hopefully becoming an international human rights lawyer.
ABOUT EMMY
MANAGING EDITOR 
Emmy is simply a magical black girl trying to figure out how to live her best life.

Her two moms, happily married since 2012, have instilled in her the confidence to speak her mind and that is what she intends to do on this platform.  

Here are just a few of the topics she intends to cover: LGBT rights, LGBT poc rights, police brutality, cultural appropriation, self-love for women of color, and last but not least, natural hair.  

When she has free time, she loves testing new hair products in her bathroom like a chemist (test tubes and all) and attempting to perfect her twist-out all the while watching House Hunters or National Geographic.
ABOUT FAITH 
CONTRIBUTING EDITOR
Having immigrated from the Philippines at a young age, Faith finds the capabilities of youth and international relations to better countries and the world as endless. 

Thus, her pieces on I, TOO will focus on international legality, south-east Asian conflicts, her experiences on living in the Philippines, youth activism, and environmental issues. 

Faith spends her time writing UN resolutions, researching, and wishing Cambridge University would go easier on undergraduate applicants. Swearing under Edmund Burke that "justice is the great standing policy of civil society," she strives to study International Law and become a U.S Judge for the International Court of Justice. 

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