She is known for writing about privatization and its consequences on Belgrade's urban planning, stating that public space ought to be ".. a resource whose development should bring equality, not the basis for profit making".
[2][3] Her main field of research examines how modern cities change within the framework of spatial, legal and economic modalities.
[4] Starting in 2003, she began working as a teaching assistant with professor Ivan Kucina, for the Faculty of Architecture at the University of Belgrade.
Her 2012 exhibition at Belgrade's Museum of Contemporary Art dealt with Yugoslavia's influence on African construction and was called "Three points of Support: Zoran Bojović, the Architect".
[10] She contributed to the collection of essays, "Nadogradnje – Urban Self-Regulation in Post-Yugoslav Cities", which was cited by Dezeen and ArchDaily as being one of the top architecture books of 2016.