Campus News

Law professor says a federal fair share tax would address wealth inequality

March 4, 2026

A new federal “fair share tax” could raise significant revenue from the nation’s wealthiest households while avoiding constitutional barriers that have stymied other proposals to tax extreme wealth, UC Berkeley Law Professor Brian Galle said during a recent James M. and Cathleen D. Stone Center on Wealth and Income Inequality lecture at UC Berkeley.

Galle outlined the proposal during a talk titled “How to Tax the Rich,” based on his...

Division of Biological Sciences Dean Richard Harland to conclude term in June 2027

February 18, 2026

The below message was sent to campus leaders and the Biological Sciences community on Wednesday, Feb. 18.

Dear Colleagues,

We wish to let you know that Richard Harland will be completing his planned three-year appointment as dean of the Division of Biological Sciences on June 30, 2027. We are grateful for his many years of service in leadership roles within the division.

During his tenure, Dean Harland has continued the Division of Biological Science’s long history of scientific and scholarly excellence. He has focused on deepening connections with campus and...

Seven UC Berkeley faculty named 2026 Sloan Fellows

February 17, 2026

A Sloan Research Fellowship is one of the most prestigious awards available to early-career researchers.

The Alfred P. Sloan Foundation today announced the names of the 126 early-career researchers selected to receive 2026 Sloan Research Fellowships, including seven from UC Berkeley.

The fellowships honor exceptional scholars in the U.S. and Canada whose creativity, innovation and research accomplishments make them stand out as the next generation of leaders. It is one of the most prestigious...

New sociology book explores how personal relationships change over a lifetime

February 12, 2026

From graduating college to dealing with health problems, major life changes can disrupt our social world. A forthcoming book, “Personal Networks over the Life Course: Dynamic Perspectives,” which was written by scholars from UC Berkeley and other institutions, examines how and why our relationships change over a lifetime.

The researchers found that major life events can strain or break some relationships. For example, moving to a new country or graduating college can cause people to lose touch with friends. However, most people eventually...

How the Berkeley Seismology Lab turns data into disaster prevention

February 12, 2026

In this Research With Results video, lab director Richard Allen explains how their work helps keep Californians safe while contributing to important earthquake-related research.

Earthquakes may cause some people to flee the Golden State, but Richard Allen came to California precisely because of them. As a seismologist — a scientist who studies the geological causes of quakes — he saw UC Berkeley as the epicenter of cutting-edge research in the field.

Much of that is thanks to the Berkeley Seismological...

Why are Tatooine planets rare? Blame general relativity.

February 3, 2026

Of the more than 4,500 stars known to have planets, one puzzling statistic stands out. Even though nearly all stars are expected to have planets and most stars form in pairs, planets that orbit both stars in a pair are rare.

Of the more than 6,000 extrasolar planets, or exoplanets, confirmed to date — most of them found by NASA’s Kepler Space Telescope and the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS) — only 14 are observed to orbit binary stars. There should be hundreds. Where are all the planets with two suns, like Tatooine in Star Wars?

Astrophysicists at the...

Berkeley Talks: Ramzi Fawaz on the psychedelic power of the humanities

January 28, 2026

In this Berkeley Talks episode, Ramzi Fawaz, a professor of English at the University of Wisconsin–Madison and UC Berkeley alum, explores why the humanities and psychedelics might have more in common than you’d think, and how literature, much like psychedelics, can help open one’s mind to the world.

Fawaz, who spoke at Berkeley in September, argues that the humanities classroom functions as a vital space for shared sense-making, where deep engagement with art and literature can rewire the brain much like a psychedelic experience — helping students heal from the rigid...

Born at UC Berkeley: a breakthrough in the treatment of sickle cell disease

January 28, 2026

Discover how CRISPR, a technology co-created by a UC Berkeley professor, is being used to transform medicine.

A sickle is a crescent-shaped blade once used to harvest wheat. When red blood cells take on that same curved shape, it signals sickle cell disease –– an inherited condition that causes cells to become stiff and sticky, blocking blood flow and triggering episodes of severe, stabbing pain known as vaso-occlusive crises.

Sickle cell disease affects more than 100,000 people in the United States, with an outsized impact on the Black community, and an estimated 8...

This Berkeley professor is exposing the hidden physical toll of our digital world

January 23, 2026

Alex Saum-Pascual proposes that new artistic representations could help bridge the gap between knowing a technology is harmful and actually changing our behavior.

It’s easy to forget that the cloud isn’t an amorphous ball of fluff, says UC Berkeley Professor Alex Saum-Pascual — that it is, in fact, physical internet infrastructure that takes many forms in many places across the world.

In her forthcoming book, Earthy Algorithms: A Materialist Reading of Digital...

From quantum theory to the modern laser: Why ‘basic science’ is the foundation of innovation

January 15, 2026

At first glance, some scientific research can seem, well, impractical. When physicists began exploring the strange, subatomic world of quantum mechanics a century ago, they weren’t trying to build better medical tools or high-speed internet. They were simply curious about how the universe worked at its most fundamental level.

Yet without that “curiosity-driven” research — often called basic science — the modern world would look...