Social Sciences (Faculty & Staff)

Sociology student shares how Social Sciences internship program prepares her for meaningful careers

February 18, 2025

The UC Berkeley Social Sciences Career Readiness Internship Program (SSCRIP) was designed to equip students with the practical knowledge and real-world experience they need to succeed in their future careers. Nohemi Aguilar, a senior who is majoring in sociology and pursuing a human rights minor, is already seeing the program's impact after her first semester.

Aguilar came to Cal after receiving several associate degrees from Cañada College in Redwood City. Feeling the need for guidance on how to...

Demystifying Research: Bringing Lived Experiences to the Forefront

January 6, 2025

UC Berkeley is a powerhouse for generating innovative ideas and solving global issues. This past summer, four fellows in the Summer Undergraduate Research Fellowship (SURF) L&S program pushed forward this initiative of pioneering visionary change by bringing research back to their communities and addressing questions that spark social change. From working with incarcerated people to immigrant families to Indigenous...

Social Sciences Dean Raka Ray's message on Black History Month

February 7, 2025

Dear Berkeley Social Sciences Community,

During this Black History Month, let's celebrate the profound contributions of our Black community members at UC Berkeley Social Sciences, who inspire us to imagine and create a more inclusive world, even when that seems hard to do.

Learn more by watching my video

Warm regards,

Raka Ray
Dean | Berkeley Social Sciences

In Memoriam: Michael Burawoy

February 6, 2025

Our beloved colleague, Michael Burawoy, was killed the evening of February 3, 2025 when he was hit by a car while walking near his home in Oakland. Michael was a pillar of our community for decades, an intellectual giant, a dedicated mentor and educator, and a dear friend. Indeed, he played a central role in defining who we are as an intellectual and human community.

UPDATE: The American Sociological Association and International Sociological Association are hosting an online tribute to Michael Burawoy's life and legacy at 9am Pacific time on...

African American Studies graduate student discusses Black film

February 4, 2025

AAS is launching a new section of our newsletter, Departmental Spotlights, organized by Graduate Student Endria Richardson. Our first spotlight features an interview with graduate student Karina Karbo-Wright.

Tell me about your work (whatever "work" means to you). What do you care about in the world, and how did you come to care about it?
My research interest is in Black film - specifically this intersection of horror and trauma that Black creatives and spectators consume from. Exploring these articulations gives deeper insight into who is considered...

UC Berkeley neuroscience post-doc fellow awarded prestigious grant for sleep research

February 3, 2025

Omer Sharon, a postdoctoral fellow at UC Berkeley, has been awarded a $75,000 grant from the 2024 Glenn Foundation for the Medical Research Postdoctoral Fellowship in Aging Research. Sponsored by the American Federation for Aging Research (AFAR), this prestigious fellowship supports research aimed at advancing our understanding of human aging.

Sharon, who conducts his research at Berkeley’s Center for Human Sleep Science, focuses on how sleep maintains brain health. One key idea is that during sleep, the brain’s cleaning system, known as the...

Political Science professor’s smart city research informs California public policy decisions

January 16, 2025

Editor’s Note: The work of UC Berkeley Social Sciences faculty helps shape California public policy. In this series, learn more about their research and projects and how they resonate with state policymakers and address solutions to the most pressing issues facing California, from food access to homelessness.

UC Berkeley Political Science and Global Metropolitan Studies Professor Alison Post uses her expertise on urban politics and policy to conduct research that highlights the importance of reducing barriers for small California public agencies...

Berkeley Voices: We learn what to fear. Can we unlearn it?

January 31, 2025

Against her mom’s warnings, UC Berkeley political scientist Marika Landau-Wells watched Arachnaphobia as a kid. Ever since, she has been terrified of spiders. But over the years, she has learned to reason with her quick fear response — No, that spider is not 8 feet in diameter — and calmly trap them and put them outside.

We all encounter problems like this, she says, where we have quick reactions to things we’ve learned to fear. It might be something that is actually dangerous that we really should quickly react to, but it...

Berkeley Talks: A blueprint for creating a world where everyone belongs

January 24, 2025

In Berkeley Talks episode 217, john a. powell and Stephen Menendian, director and assistant director of UC Berkeley’s Othering and Belonging Institute, discuss their 2024 book, Belonging Without Othering: How We Save Ourselves and the World

During the campus event, the scholars touch on the transformative role of imagination...

Trump may be planning a sharp, extended conflict with California, experts say

January 14, 2025

President Donald Trump and the state of California engaged in low-grade conflict almost continually during his first term in the White House, and hostilities flashed into the headlines again this week as horrifying wildfires brought death and destruction to Los Angeles. Rather than offer words of consolation and support, Trump attacked Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom — and blamed him for the fires.

In a social media post, Trump made no mention of intense Santa Ana winds or how climate...