Ruben CamposDr. Ruben Enrique Campos III is a Student Support Specialist in Advising, Civic Engagement in the Social Sciences and a lecturer in the Department of Ethnic Studies at the University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa. As a specialist, his primary focus is developing a sense of belonging for students through campus and community engagement. As an anthropologist, he researches aurality, urban mobility, and identity. He published “Hip-hop, La Crónica and Epiphany in Mexico City: Performative Research, Methodological Identities and Affective Analysis” in Life Writing 18.4; “‘I’m about to get really racist’: Racialization, Resistance and the Local in Hawai‘i Battle Rap.” Social Process in Hawai’i 46, co-authored with Roderick N. Labrador, and Ethan Caldwell; and “The Posse Cut as Autobiographic Utterance of Place in The Night Marchers’ Three Dots.” in Biography, An Interdisciplinary Quarterly 41.3. He also collaborates with Pau Hana Sessions and Island Connections to create Audio Visual Studies in Ethnicity in Hawai'i, Korea and Japan.
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