Grounding her research in the fields of architecture, urbanism, critical theory and the visual arts, Miron has an B.Arch from the Cooper Union in NY, a M.Arch from the ETSAB in Barcelona and a degree in Urban Studies from the Bauhaus in Dessau. She examines diverse ecologies, temporalities and geographies through mapping practices, and installations. Implementing digital technologies and traditional crafts, Miron crosses trans-disciplinary boundaries to interpret contemporary landscapes and changing ecologies while exploring notions of reconstruction, memory, questions of biopolitics, territorialities, and human rights. Her thesis project Modern Ecologies: Contemporary Landscapes and Mapping Abstractions in the Americas investigates geo-political regions and pin points time periods in Latin America through the exploration of maps, archives and narratives. The investigation questions the loss of ecosystems and archaic traditions, due to modernization of environments and cultures, through highlighting the genealogy of mapping and surveillance that is inscribed in territorial formations, aesthetically the works investigate abstraction, modernity, ecological transformations and complexities in contemporary mapping, and large scale interventions and topographies to read the undertones of modernity inscribed in threatened disappearing landscapes. Miron’s research aim challenges dominant notions of cartography and territorialities and present socio, geo-political and environmental dimensions, while analyzing notions of memory, geopolitical sites of trauma, public amnesia and historical and cultural erasures.