Social Sciences (Faculty & Staff)

UC Berkeley senior Eli Glickman awarded prestigious Marshall Scholarship

December 16, 2024

Eli Glickman, a senior Political Science major and Public Policy minor in the UC Berkeley College of Letters & Science from Bethesda, MD, has been named a 2025 Marshall Scholar, the university’s first since 2022. As a Marshall Scholar, Glickman will be funded for two years of graduate study in the United Kingdom. Glickman is Berkeley’s 34th recipient of the Marshall Scholarship since its inception in 1953.

“I was extremely pleased when I first learned that I had been selected as a Marshall Scholar,” Glickman shared. “The application process...

How bad will it get? Political scientists have a pessimism bias, study finds

December 18, 2024

The past decade has seen historic challenges for U.S. democracy and an intense focus by scholars on events that seem to signal democratic decline. But new research released today (Dec. 17) finds that a bias toward pessimism among U.S. political scientists often leads to inaccurate predictions about the future threats to democracy.

The research, co-authored by UC Berkeley political scientist Andrew T. Little, offers a possible solution: an approach that aggregates experts’ predictions, finds the middle ground and then reduces the influence of pessimism, leading to the...

24 L&S News Highlights from 2024

December 16, 2024
Looking back on another outstanding year, Berkeley Letters & Science has compiled “24 L&S Highlights of 2024”—a recap of news, events, and announcements from the L&S community this year. Here are just a handful of the many stories demonstrating the extraordinary work of L&S students, faculty, staff, and alumni. Enjoy! Milestones & Research

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Cognitive Science students use AI tools to become entrepreneurs through innovative course

December 19, 2024

The Cognitive Science program’s Berkeley Accelerator & Startup Incubator in Cognitive Science (BASICS) class, which fuses cognitive science and entrepreneurship, hosted a Pitch Day recently for students to present their business plans. The event marked the culmination of months of brainstorming and hard work in the class.

“The primary goal of the course is to give cognitive science students tools to be entrepreneurs,” said Uri Korisky, one of the course’s instructors. “We guide them through all the steps needed to flesh out their ideas into...

Do animals get jealous like people? Researchers say it’s complicated.

December 12, 2024

It’s a question that has puzzled thinkers for centuries: Are we humans alone in our pursuit of fairness and the frustration we feel when others get what we want?

In recent years, evolutionary psychologists have suggested that we’re not all that special. Animals, from corvids to capuchin monkeys, express what humans might recognize as jealousy when, for example, they are passed over for a sought-after snack. Many argue this is evidence we are not alone in our aversion toward unfairness.

But new research from the University of California, Berkeley, makes the case that humans...

Unfinished Business: Ethnic Studies reflects on how the Free Speech Movement informed its creation

December 9, 2024

Sixty years after UC Berkeley's Free Speech Movement ignited a wave of campus activism, the university’s Ethnic Studies Department is one of its enduring legacies. Born from the demands of student activists who, like those in the Free Speech Movement (FSM), sought to reshape academia, the department symbolizes the intersection of free speech, academic freedom and social justice.

The Third World Liberation Front (TWLF) — a multi-racial coalition of students who advocated for a relevant and robust education — played a crucial role in realizing this vision,...

How to think about Thanksgiving like a food historian

November 26, 2024

Thanksgiving is a holiday all about food — and gratitude, of course — that creates sensory memories: rosemary-scented stuffing, a well of warm gravy threatening to spill out of its mashed potato seat, tart goops of cranberry sauce, triangles of pie and a massive bird at the center of it all.

But while we often know the short-term backstory of what’s on the table (“This cornbread is my aunt’s recipe” or “We started making this side when so-and-so became vegetarian”), the larger historical context behind what many consider the traditional Thanksgiving spread may be less top-of-mind...

“I will tell everyone about this program.” How Berkeley Social Sciences prepares students for meaningful careers.

November 18, 2024

While some of her peers were relaxing over summer vacation, Eythana Miller was reviewing music and art exhibitions and conducting interviews for METAL Magazine. It was a dream internship for college students who, like Miller, are interested in pursuing a career in journalism.

UC Berkeley scholars say the economy, sexism and conspiracies fueled Trump’s reelection

November 6, 2024

Former President Donald Trump has decisively won reelection to the White House, a political outcome that began reverberating around the globe in the hours after the polls closed Tuesday. After polling for weeks had shown a too-close-to-call race that might take days to conclude, Trump’s clear win struck many as a shock.

Analysts will likely spend years working to fully understand the forces that drove his return to power. But on the day after, top UC Berkeley scholars offer a sharp and sometimes unsettling assessment of the dynamics at play. Some cite Trump’s appeal to white voters...

UC Berkeley professor breaks down the science of ‘Inside Out 2’

November 6, 2024

There’s a scene in Pixar’s hit film Inside Out 2 when teen Riley, the human protagonist of the Inside Out world, senses that one of her 13-year-old friends isn’t telling her everything. The audience zooms in to Riley’s mind, where her emotions are trying to figure it all out. Disgust is on top of it. She pulls up a screen and starts examining Riley’s friend’s furrowed brow. “Enhance,” Disgust barks, as the view pushes into the telltale corrugator muscle that controls our eyebrows.

That scene,...