[2] He then attended the University of California, San Diego, graduating with a Master of Arts in Ethnic Studies in 2007, and completing his PhD in 2010.
[2] His research focuses on the impact of colonization on the Chamorro people and the importance of the nation gaining independence.
[3] He is a board member of the San Diego Chamorro Cultural Center, through which he stood before the Fourth Committee of the United Nations to attest on Guam's political and colonial status in 2007.
[2] Bevacqua has helped to organize several academic and activist events, including the 2003 Human Rights Watch Film Festival in Guam and California, and the conferences "Famoksaiyan: Decolonizing Chamorro Histories, Identities and Futures" (2006), "Famoksaiyan: Our Time to Paddle Forward" (2007), and "Ghosts, Monsters and the Dead" (2007).
[2] Bevacqua is a member of multiple academic and activist groups, including The Association of Asian American Studies, The Chamorro Information Activists, Nasion Chamoru, The National Association of Ethnic Studies, The National Pacific Islander Education Network, and Famoksaiyan.