Ken De Bevoise taught English at the Phitsanulok College of Education
for three years
After leaving Thailand he was a labor law attorney in Guam and San
Francisco. Subsequently, he lived in Chile, China, the Philippines,
and the United States, teaching at the International School (Nido
de Aguilas) in Santiago, the Johns Hopkins University-Nanjing University
School for Chinese and American Studies in Nanjing, New Mexico State
University in Las Cruces, and Northwestern University in Evanston,
Illinois.
As the recipient of three Fulbright grants for study in Southeast
Asia, he has done academic research in the Philippines and Cambodia
and has also participated in the former country's national program
for the prevention of HIV/AIDS and STDs in Cebu City. He is currently
an adjunct professor of history and political science at the University
of Oregon in Eugene, specializing in U.S. foreign relations, Southeast
Asia, and the American criminal justice system. He is the author
of Agents of Apocalypse: Epidemic Disease in the Colonial Philippines
(Princeton University Press, 1995).
Here's an article written about him by someone at his university
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