Native@Cal

Online via Zoom

Attend this session for an overview of the American Indian Graduate Program's (AIGP) Fall programming for incoming graduate students. This will be an opportunity to learn about the new a new space for URM graduate students - the Inclusive Excellence Hub, Office for Graduate Diversity resources, meet current AIGP students, Diversity Fellows, and learn information about recent the Native American Opportunity Program funding. Register for this session.

Primer to the Office for Graduate Diversity

Online via Zoom

Come meet staff and students who are part of the Office for Graduate Diversity team. Join us for an overview of the resources, opportunities for involvement on campus we offer to ensure prospective and current graduate students historically excluded from academia are connected and set up for success at Cal! Register for this session.

Clint Carroll: Knowing the Land

Hybrid: Zoom and 132 Mulford Hall

Indigenous Nations face significant challenges when it comes to the interrelated processes of cultural knowledge revitalization and environmental adaptation. These challenges range from compromised local ecological health brought about by development and climate change, to limited access to land due to legal, social, and/or political barriers, and to obstacles to knowledge transmission caused by educational and economic forces. This talk views these challenges in the context of past and ongoing mutually constitutive structures of settler colonialism and capitalism, as well as through a framework of “relational continuity,” in which Indigenous peoples seek to maintain relational obligations to land and more-than-humans despite spatial and social change. Specifically, Clint Carroll discuss my long-term work with Cherokee people in Oklahoma on tribal environmental policy, land-based education, and comprehensive conservation strategies. Clint Carroll is Associate Professor of Ethnic Studies at the University of Colorado Boulder. He received his doctorate from the University of California Berkeley in Environmental Science, Policy, and Management, and his bachelor’s degree from the University of Arizona in Anthropology, with a minor in American Indian Studies. A citizen of the Cherokee Nation, he works closely with Cherokee people in Oklahoma on issues of land conservation and the perpetuation of land-based knowledge and ways of life. His book Roots of Our Renewal: Ethnobotany and Cherokee Environmental Governance <https://www.upress.umn.edu/book-division/books/roots-of-our-renewal> (University of Minnesota Press 2015) explores how tribal natural resource managers navigate the material and structural conditions of settler colonialism, as well as how recent efforts in cultural revitalization are informing such practices through traditional forms of decision-making and local environmental knowledge. This event is free, open to the public, and wheelchair accessible.

AIGP Graduate Parent Night

The Inclusive Excellence Hub 2515 Channing Way, Berkeley, CA, United States

All graduate students, parents, and children are welcome to attend UC Berkeley's American Indian Graduate Program (AIGP) Parent Night to showcase research opportunities rooted in the unique conditions of Indigenous-based histories, environments, cultures, economies, literature and aspects of professional career development. Food will be provided and this initial meeting will serve as a starting discussion for additional resources to host this event at the hub and additional support. Register for this event by contacting [email protected].

Indigenous Peoples’ Day with Dr. Cutcha Risling Baldy

B100 Blum Hall B100 Blum Hall, Berkeley, CA, United States

On behalf of the Native FEWS Alliance, NASD, AIGP, and the Office of Graduate Diversity, we are proud to present a lecture by Dr. Cutcha Risling Baldy– a Hupa, Yurok, and Karuk assistant professor from Cal Poly Humboldt. Dr. Risling Baldy will be discussing Indigenous rights on Indigenous Peoplesʼ Day, Monday, October 9th at 2:00 pm in Blum Hall (B100) with snacks and refreshments, as well as on Zoom (Meeting ID: 990 9695 8930 Passcode: 648420). Dr. Risling Baldyʼs research focuses on Indigenous Feminism, California Native Studies, and Decolonization. In her recent award-winning book, We Are Dancing For You, Risling Baldy looks into the vitalization of women's coming-of-age ceremonies that highlight Indigenous perspectives in academia and beyond. Dr. Risling Baldyʼs lecture is open to the public and we would love for students and community members to learn about powerful Indigenous-led work. We look forward to being in community with you!

Office for Graduate Diversity Welcome Reception

Faculty Club Lawn

The Office for Graduate Diversity is excited to invite new and continuing graduate students from all departments to connect and build an inclusive community at our 2024 Welcome Reception. Join us to learn more about our programs and newly renovated space for graduate students, the Inclusive Excellence Hub.  Offerings: Free food and music Mingle with other new and continuing students Connect with various graduate affinity groups such as the First-Gen Low-Income Grads, Black Graduate Student Association, Graduate Association of Latinx Students, SACNAS, and many more.  Registration is required. 

Free