Diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) at ERG
Equity and inclusion are at the heart of our mission to provide education and research for a sustainable and just society. We aspire to be an inclusive community with diverse ideas, races, ethnicities, genders, sexual orientations, ages, abilities, and socioeconomic backgrounds. We celebrate diversity in scholarship, teaching, community life, and public engagement. We also hold ourselves accountable to our equity and inclusion goals through reflection and open dialogue amongst students, faculty, and staff.ERG’s 2019 cohort participating in a student welcome and orientation day. (Elmallah, 2019)ERG Diversity Committee
The ERG Diversity Committee is our departmental standing committee in charge of overseeing diversity within ERG. The ERG Diversity Committee, in consultation with students, staff, and faculty, developed the 2019-2024 ERG Strategic Plan for Equity, Inclusion, and Diversity. Per ERG’s by-laws, the committee’s responsibilities are to:“ensure a climate of equity and inclusion that fosters diversity; develop and monitor ERG’s Strategic Plan for Equity, Inclusion, and Diversity; expand strategies for attracting and retaining a diverse faculty; seek means to increase the diversity of students in ERG; ensure diverse representation and inclusion of graduate students on search and selection committees; and seek other opportunities to bring a diversity of individuals into ERG teaching and research programs.”
The committee is composed of a chair selected from the core faculty, two student members, the ERG manager, and one or two members of the ERG core faculty and/or affiliates. Student representatives volunteer or are nominated and rotate through time. The committee meets at least once per semester and more frequently as needed. Current committee members include:- Lara Kueppers, Committee Chair, core faculty member, and ERG Equity Adviser
- Youjin Chung, ERG-ESPM faculty member
- Megan Amaral, ERG Manager, ex-officio
- Salma Elmallah, Student Representative
- Anaya Hall, Student Representative
Student-led groups at ERG
Student-led groups at ERG related to DEI include the ERG Student Advocacy Committee for Equity and Inclusion (SACEI), ERG Women, and QuERGies. Additional DEI efforts have included informal language-based gatherings (e.g., Mandarin, French, Spanish), biennial department climate surveys, Visit Day and Diversity Day for accepted students, peer mentoring for accepted and new students, DEI workshops, and BIPOC and diversity potluck dinners, providing safe spaces off campus. Student Advocacy Committee for Equity and Inclusion (SACEI) SACEI (pronounced säkē) is a student-led group that advocates for and supports initiatives to promote and improve equity, inclusion, and diversity within ERG and beyond. SACEI activities include coordinating a peer mentoring program alongside ERG staff, assisting with the annual ERG climate survey, advising the Admissions Committee in recruiting and reaching out to underrepresented applicants, representing ERG at admissions fairs and other events, organizing DEI trainings, and liaising with the graduate student union. Current students can join here. ERG Women This student group holds potlucks and other get-togethers where ERG women can connect with other women students and discuss issues that are important to women and femmes in academia, including trans and gender non-conforming folks. Current students can join here. QuERGies QuERGies is ERG’s queer student and alumni network. We are primarily a social group, hosting events throughout the year to create safe and welcoming spaces for LGBTQ+ students at ERG. We also help other ERGies be more inclusive of LGBTQ+ people. Current ERGies and alumni can join here. Equity and inclusion banners in Sproul Plaza — a project initiated, designed, and temporarily installed by the ERG SACEI. (C. Hyun 2017)Diversity of scholarship
Research ERG encourages a variety of research topics and approaches as part of our commitment to diversity and inclusion. We work to create research environments that are inclusive and respectful of different perspectives and approaches. The videos below are examples of the far-ranging and interdisciplinary research we do at ERG. Find more ERG spotlights here. Here are a few ERGie papers related to our joint mission of research for a sustainable environment and a just society:- Sunter, D.A., S. Castellanos, and D.M. Kammen. 2019. Disparities in Rooftop Photovoltaics Deployment in the United States by Race and Ethnicity. Nature Sustainability, 2: 71-76.
- Balazs, C. and R. Morello-Frosch. 2013. The Three R’s: How Community Based Participatory Research Strengthens the Rigor, Relevance and Reach of Science. Environmental Justice, 6(1): 9-16. Balazs, C., R. Morello-Frosch, A. Hubbard, and I. Ray. 2011. Social Disparities in Nitrate-Contaminated Drinking Water in California’s San Joaquin Valley. Environmental Health Perspectives, 119(9): 1272-1278.
- Osborne, T. 2017. Public Political Ecology: A Community of Praxis for Earth Stewardship. Journal of Political Ecology, 24: 843-860.
- Ranganathan, M. 2016. Thinking with Flint: Racial Liberalism and the Roots of an American Water Tragedy. Capitalism Nature Socialism, 27 (3): 17-33.
- Cushing, L., R. Morello-Frosch, M. Wander and M. Pastor. 2015. The Haves, the Have-nots, and the Health of Everyone: The Relationship between Social Inequality and Environmental Quality. Annual Review of Public Health, 18(36): 193-209.
- Ribot, J. and N.L. Peluso. 2003. A Theory of Access. Rural Sociology, 68(2): 153-181.
- ENERES 98/198 – Energy DeCal
- ENERES 175/275 – Water and Development
- ENERES 180/280 – Ecological Economics in Historical Context
- ENERES C271 – Energy and Development Doctoral Seminar
- ENERES C283 – Information and Communications Technology for Development
- Berkeley Chancellor’s Fellowship
- Berkeley Human Rights Fellowship
- Echoing Green Fellowships
- Ford Foundation Fellowship Program
- Fulbright-Hayes Doctoral Dissertation Research Abroad
- GEM Fellowship
- Graduate Fellows Program through the Institute for the Study of Societal Issues
- Graduate Fellows Program through the Joseph A. Myers Center for Research on Native American Issues
- Graduate Student Parent & Caregivers Fellowships
- Hertz Foundation Graduate Fellowship
- Innovations at the Nexus of Food, Energy, and Water Systems
- National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship Program
- Philip Brett LGBT Studies Fellowship
- Soroptimist International Founder Region Fellowship for Women
- Switzer Fellowship
- Union of Concerned Scientists Kendall Fellowship
Students enjoying an art corner at ERG’s second-annual Multicultural Day, a community-building potluck that gives ERGies a chance to share their culture and cuisine with each other (Elmallah, 2019) ERGies supporting a cost of living adjustment as part of the COLA4All campaign. Cecilia (then an ERG Master’s student) and Pierce (then an ERG PhD student) present about the Data & Diversity course at a workshop. (Life@ERG, February 2016)
Additional resources and readings
Related Life@ERG blog posts- Quarantine Diaries, Part 2 – Home-Schooling, Mega-Pods, And Yeats — 4/2020
- Quarantine Diaries, Part 1 – Virtual Seders, Walden Pond, And TikTok Videos — 4/2020
- BLERG! Application FAQs for prospective students — 9/2019
- What does smog have to do with diversity? — 11/2018
- Diversity, Representation, and Environmentalism — 9/2018
- Thoughts from 金盆村: the Golden Basin Village — 7/2018
- One Year Later: Why and How We Resist – 11/2017
- ERG & Election: Can we talk about this? – 11/2016
- Getting Inclusive With Data Science: ERG Students Initiate Data & Diversity Course at Cal – 02/2016
- Environmental Policy: Looking Past our Green-Colored Glasses – 07/2015
- UC Berkeley’s Division of Equity, Inclusion, and Diversity
- Graduate Diversity Program
- Centers for Educational Justice & Community Engagement
- Disabled Students Program
- Berkeley International Office
- Office for Faculty Equity & Welfare
- Multicultural Education Program
- University of California Diversity
- Restorative Justice Center at UC Berkeley
- American Indian Graduate Program
- Graduate Assembly
- Beyond Diversity: A Roadmap to Building an Inclusive Organization
- Green 2.0: The State of Diversity in Environmental Organizations
- Green Must Diversify or Die
- Grist: Think People of Color Don’t Care About the Environment? Think Again and Stuff That Matters: White Greens
- Office for Faculty Equity & Welfare – News and Research
- Assessing the Diversity of Contemporary Environmentalism: Time for a New Paradigm