Arwa Bukhtiar is affiliated with The Open University Law School and the Centre for Protecting Women Online.
You can email Arwa Bukhtiar directly but for media enquiries, please contact a member of The Open University's Media Relations team.
My Journey: From Pakistan to the Forefront of Digital Justice Research
As I prepare to embark on my PhD journey in February 2025, I am filled with a sense of purpose and excitement. My name is Arwa Bukhtiar, and my research represents more than an academic pursuit – it is a mission to protect and empower women in our rapidly evolving digital landscape.My academic journey began in Pakistan and found its home in the United Kingdom. Over the past seven years, I have transformed my educational path, starting with my LLB at Brunel University, London, and later completing my LLM at Wolverhampton University. Each step of this journey has been driven by a deep commitment to understanding how law can be a powerful tool for social change.
My doctoral research, "Justice in the Digital Age: A Comparative Analysis of Gender-Responsive Legal Approaches to Combat Technology-Facilitated Violence Against Women and Girls in the EU, UK, and Australia", emerges from a profound personal and professional conviction. As a woman who has navigated multiple cultural contexts, I have witnessed firsthand the vulnerabilities that women face in digital spaces. The motivation behind my research is deeply personal and urgent. Technology-facilitated violence is not just a legal problem – it is a human rights issue that threatens the safety, dignity, and potential of women and girls worldwide. By comparing legal approaches across the EU, UK, and Australia, I aim to:
1. Expose the gaps in current legal frameworks
2. Identify innovative strategies for protection
3. Develop comprehensive, gender-responsive legal approaches
4. Create actionable recommendations for policymakers
My research is more than an academic exercise. It is a bridge between technological advancement and human rights, between legal theory and practical protection. I am driven by the belief that law can be a transformative tool – one that not only prevents harm but actively creates spaces of safety, respect, and empowerment for women in the digital age.
As a Pakistani woman who has made the UK her academic home, I bring a unique perspective to this work. My cross-cultural experience allows me to see beyond singular narratives, to understand the complex, interconnected nature of technology, gender, and justice. In February 2025, I will begin a journey that I hope will contribute to meaningful change. My PhD is not just about earning a degree – it's about creating knowledge that can protect, empower, and transform the lives of women and girls around the world.
This is my commitment. This is my research. This is my purpose.