Metadata
Title
Staff as Students of Social Justice
Category
undergraduate
UUID
a6af019593fc48398abf6085da528f01
Source URL
https://americancultures.berkeley.edu/sssj
Parent URL
https://americancultures.berkeley.edu/
Crawl Time
2026-03-10T04:22:50+00:00
Rendered Raw Markdown

Staff as Students of Social Justice

Source: https://americancultures.berkeley.edu/sssj Parent: https://americancultures.berkeley.edu/

Staff as Students of Social Justice: Professional Development Program

Staff as Students of Social Justice

Program for Campus Staff to Engage in Anti-Racist Pedagogies

Background image: Collage of communities of color organizing for housing for all; mutual aid; people's free food program and land repatriation

About the Program

The 'Staff as Students of Social Justice' (SSSJ) Program(link is external) is an innovative professional development opportunity for UC Berkeley campus staff and faculty. Brought to life through the American Cultures Center, SSSJ is an important expression of the campus’s commitment to staff’s intellectual and professional development, especially around issues of diversity, equity, inclusion, belonging, and justice. This program is a keystone effort of the university’s work towards Becoming an Anti-Racist Campus(link is external). This program provides a unique opportunity to learn first-hand from leading scholars and American Cultures instructors about the intersections of race, ethnicity, and gender; dig into subjects of personal interests; and build connections with faculty, students, and campus colleagues. Now continuing its sixth year, this program is 10-weeks long in the Fall and Spring semesters, offering a weekly seminar over Zoom, titled “Material Anti-Racisms,” led by the SSSJ Program Director of Pedagogy, David Maldonado. This seminar provides a deep study of abolitionism and higher education, incorporating content from the previous SSSJ lecture series “Aspirations of Material Anti-Racism: What’s Next.”

Application Process

The application period for the Spring 2026 Cohort is now closed. Please contact us at sssj@berkeley.edu if you have any questions.

The best thing about the program was that I was able to gain a more firm and nuanced understanding of the harms and inequities of the tech industry while having really thoughtful conversations with our professors, my classmates, and folks from the VCUE Division around existing and imagined interventions into so many different facets of tech in a lot of other spaces from art to journalism to activism.

Sara Assadi-Nik, Program Coordinator, Division of Summer Sessions, Study Abroad & Lifelong Learning

[## "Aspirations of Material Anti-Racism: What’s Next?"

Explore recordings, resources, and keytakeaways from this public lecture series that features experts from academia and beyond, focusing on Black freedom movements, decolonial theory and practice, mutual aid, and housing rights, and other topics](https://americancultures.berkeley.edu/sssj/aspirations)

[## Presentations and Projects

Participants have been asked to create projects focused on a specific topic of their choosing to illustrate their understanding of the course materials. These projects showcase their intellectual development around topics related to diversity, equity, belonging, inclusion, and justice. Please take a few moments to explore some of the previous cohorts' presentations and projects.](https://americancultures.berkeley.edu/staff-students-social-justice/sssj-audited-courses)

Program Overview

Through this course, we learned how the devastating fires we experience in California today are a product of climate change and pervasive policies of suppression deeply connected to settler colonialism, white supremacy, and dispossession of Native peoples from their ancestral lands. We also learned from guest speakers about several tribal groups' ongoing efforts to preserve, sustain, revitalize, and share their cultural practices and scientific knowledge.

Jean Cheng, Sarah Pickett, and Alex Tan