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  • Colaboradores / Contributors / Collaborateurs

Luis J. Beltránlvarez <luis.beltran-alvarez@uconn.edu> nació en Aguadilla, Puerto Rico. Estudió sus bachilleratos en Ciencia Política y Sociología en la Universidad de Puerto Rico Recinto de Río Piedras. De esta universidad también obtuvo una maestría en Filosofía. Actualmente cursa sus estudios de Doctorado en Ciencia Política en la Universidad de Connecticut, Storrs. Sus intereses de investigación son la teoría política, el feminismo decolonial, el anarquismo, el posmarxismo y las teorías del discurso.

Rafael Climent-Espino <rafael_climent@baylor.edu> is Associate Professor of Spanish and Portuguese at Baylor University. He specialized in Latin American narrative of the 20th and 21st centuries with emphasis in Brazilian literature. His research explores issues related to textual studies in Latin American narrative and examines the role of food within Latin American fiction and culture. He has recently edited two books: Food, Texts and Cultures in Latin America and Spain (2020) and Perspectivas críticas da literatura brasileira no século XXI (2021).

Miguel del Pozo <Miguel.delpozo@upr.edu> has PhD in social anthropology at The University of Manchester, United Kingdom. Associate professor in the Social Sciences Department at University of Puerto Rico in Ponce. His research interests include environmental anthropology, fishing and coastal communities, fisheries management and ethnoecology.

Carlos García Quijano <cgarciaquijano@uri.edu>, University of Rhode Island.

Gerardo González Núñez <gegonza@coqui.net> tiene un Doctorado en Negocios Internacionales de la Universidad Interamericana de Puerto Rico y es Catedrático de Economía y Negocios Internacionales en la propia universidad. Sus artículos han sido publicados en revistas especializadas de América Latina, el Caribe, Estados Unidos y Europa. Es autor de varios libros entre los que se pueden mencionar El Caribe en la política exterior de Cuba, publicado en República Dominicana en 1991, ¿Intelectuales vs Revolución? publicado en Canadá en 2001 y Oportunidades de negocios en Cuba. ¿Qué puede esperar Puerto Rico?, publicado en San Juan, Puerto Rico en el 2010. Ha impartido conferencias y cursos en varias universidades de Estados Unidos y de América Latina y el Caribe.

Cynthia Grace-McCaskey <gracemccaskeyc15@ecu.edu> is a cultural anthropologist with a focus on applied environmental anthropology. She holds a joint position between the Coastal Studies Institute (CSI) and the Department of Anthropology at East Carolina University. Dr. Grace-McCaskey received a M.A. in Marine Affairs and Policy from the Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science at the University of Miami in 2006, and a Ph.D. in Applied Anthropology from the University of South Florida in 2012. Her research interests include political ecology, marine resource management, traditional ecological knowledge, social-ecological systems, and cooperative resource management and institutions.

David Griffith <griffithd@ecu.edu> is a distinguished professor of anthropology in the Department of Coastal Studies at East Carolina University. He specializes in economic anthropology, focusing primarily on labor, livelihood constellations, and the dialectical relations between moral and political economy.

Z Hagley <z.hagley@gmail.com> is a Grenadian academic and independent consultant. She currently lectures communications at St. George’s University, while running a media and communications consulting company. She holds a Master of Science in Development Management (concentration in communication technologies) from the London School of Economics, and a Bachelor of Science in International Relations and Journalism from the University of the West Indies, Mona.

Thelma Jiménez-Anglada <thelma.jimenez-anglada@lawrence. edu>, Lawrence University.

Hilda Lloréns <hilda_llorens@uri.edu> is an Associate Professor of Anthropology and Marine Affairs at the University of Rhode Island. Lloréns’ research and writing are concerned with understanding how race, gender, socioeconomic class, the social practices of power and structural inequalities intersect in several areas of cultural, social, and environmental life in the Americas. Her academic books include Imaging the Great Puerto Rican Family: Framing Nation, Race and Gender during the American Century (2014) and Making Livable Worlds: Afro-Puerto Rican Women Building Environmental Justice (2021).

Marc M...

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