Ivonne Campos

Master and PhD in Asian and African Studies, specializing in China, from El Colegio de México, and Ethnohistorian from the National School of Anthropology and History (Mexico). Her research interests include political-social issues such as discrimination, racism and xenophobic violence in Mexico, topics associated with the presence of Chinese immigrants in Mexico, for which she has several publications. In her most recent research on the Chinese presence in Mexico, she developed a study from the anthropology of food on the practices of Chinese immigrants, of which she also published several articles and co-coordinated the book The Overseas Chinese: taste, food culture and culinary practices (Palabra de Clío, 2020). She is a member of the Latin American Association of Asian and African Studies (ALADAA), and of the Latin (and Hispanic) Americanist Academic Network on Sinological Studies, based at the University of Costa Rica. She collaborates with the Interinstitutional Seminar on Racism and Xenophobia (SURXE) of CEIICH/UNAM. She is a National Researcher Candidate for the National System of Researchers (CONACYT - Mexico) and is currently a research professor at the Center for Political and Social Studies of El Colegio de Tlaxcala, Mexico.