Latinx Heritage Month
Latinx Heritage Month
Celebrating Latinx Heritage Month 2025
Three Rodriguez siblings rewrite their family’s future through a Berkeley education
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Gladys Torres-Carmona is Latinx at Cal
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Watch Prof. Victor Ortega Jiménez explain how animals move in 101 seconds
Learn how biologists like Victor Ortega Jiménez use high-speed cameras to record fascinating slow motion footage of animals in the wild.
UC Berkeley Library: Hispanic Heritage Month 2025 book list
This Latinx Heritage Month, we recognize the vibrant and diverse contributions of the Latinx community to our campus and beyond.
This is a time to celebrate our shared heritage, honor the achievements of Latinx individuals, and engage with the cultural, academic, and social richness of our community. Now more than ever, community matters—as a place of understanding, care, and resilience. Together, we can create spaces where all feel seen, valued, and supported.
As we share community’s contributions, we must first acknowledge the conversations around the use of multiple “umbrella” terms, such as Hispanic, Chicano/Chicana, or Latino/Latina/Latinx/Latine, and the many intersectional identifying terms people embrace, whether racial identities or signifiers, such as first-generation or undocumented/documented. We respect and appreciate how community members choose to self-identify. While we use the broader term Latinx for this message, we are mindful both of the shared histories of inequities Latinx communities have endured, as well as the historical, raciolinguistic, regional, social, and educational variance and specificities experienced by Latinx peoples.
What are UC Berkeley's Thriving Initiatives?
Spotlight: Latinx Thriving Initiatives
When former Chancellor Christ set the goal for Berkeley to become a Hispanic Serving Institution (HSI), it was apparent that other changes needed to be made institutionally in order to meet this goal and better serve our Latinx students, as well as staff, faculty, and alumni. Hence, the HSI Initiative became the Latinx Thriving Initiatives (LTI). Achieving HSI designation is one goal, and LTI consists of broader efforts to intentionally serve Latinx/e students, staff and faculty.
Task Forces and Advisory Bodies
- The Latinx Thriving Initiatives Advisory Board (formerly the Chicanx/Latinx Standing Committee)
Student Orgs and Advocacy Groups
- CalLink groups: There are over 40+ Latinx Student Organizations and Advocacy Groups at UC Berkeley. Get involved today!
- Graduate Association of Latinx Students (GALS)
- UC Berkeley Chicano Latino Alumni Association
Student Resources
- Chicanx Latinx Student Development: The Chicanx Latinx Student Development office is a student run, staff led space working to retain Latinx students at Berkeley
- Fridays from 3-5pm: “Let’s Talk” Drop-In consultations with Dr. Veronica Orozco, a UHS Student Mental Health Counselor who discusses Chicanx Latinx topics
- Office for Graduate Diversity
- UHS: Specialized support for the Latinx community at Berkeley
Staff and Faculty Resources
- Alianza: Community building, professional development and promotion of Latinx staff
- It is important that we acknowledge the intersectional identities that exist within communities. While it is an issue that impacts several communities beyond Latinx, we would like to take this time to:
- Invite the community to visit UHS' specialized support for the undocumented community at UC Berkeley
- Invite staff and faculty to join an upcoming UndocuAlly Training to learn about how to support undocumented students, especially in the current times. Visit the UndocuAlly page for more details and to sign up.
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Articles/Profiles
Latinx Heritage Month 2025
A message from leadership to the campus community.
Events
- August 10, 2025: Virtual Familia Orientation
- August 20, 2025: Bienvenida, Student Panel, and Resource Fair
- September 15, 2025 from 12-1pm: Alianza Latinx Heritage Month Meet & Greet
- September 18, 2025: Special event at all dining commons
- September 21, 2025 from 5-7pm: 10th Anniversary Comunidad en La Placita
- September 21, 2025: Opening reception of Berkeley’s Latino Community: A Story of Pride and Resilience, 1900–2025
- October 2, 2025 from 4-6pm: Latinx Research Center Welcome Reception
- October 3, 2025 from 2-4pm: Celebración de La Familia at University Village in Albany. No RSVP required.
- October 4, 2025 from 10:30am-1:30pm: Tailgate Event at the Latinx Research Center
- October 4, 2025 from 9am-5pm: Homecoming Open House at the Latinx Student Resource Center
- October 9, 2025: The Loft Hour: Karina Gutierrez + Mu-Xuan Lin 林慕萱
- October 25, 2025: UC Chicanx Latinx Alumni Association (CLAA) Summit at UC Berkeley
- October 25, 2025: Cal Performances presents Lila Downs: Día de los Muertos
- October 29, 2025: Graduate Lectures Present "The Soul - The Spirit is My Altar" with Martha Moreno Vega
- October 30, 2025 from 4-6pm: Latinx Research Center Dia de los Muertos event
- November 1, 2025 at 6pm: Dia de los Muertos Community Event in Bauer Wurster Hall
- November 12-14, 2025: Cal Alumni Association Sharing Wisdom Across Generations (SWAG)
- December 11, 2025: End-of-Semester "Latinx Posada” at the Latinx Research Center
- Spring 2026: Chicanx Latinx Graduation
Research
Jenny S. Guadamuz
Assistant Professor at the School of Public Health
Dr. Guadamuz is a health services researcher who uses an interdisciplinary approach to identify how structural determinants impact health care access among minoritized racial/ethnic and immigrant populations. Relevant publications:
Immigration Status & Disparities in the Treatment of Cardiovascular Risk Factors
Mediators of racial/ethnic inequities in clinical trial participation among patients with cancer
Dr. Kristina Lovato
Assistant Professor of Social Welfare; Director of Center on Immigration and Child Welfare Initiative (CICW); inaugural member of the Latinx & Democracy Cluster
Her scholarship examines how immigration enforcement and child welfare policies affect Latin American–origin families, with a focus on youth development, family dynamics, and community well-being. Her current project, supported by national foundations, investigates the mental health and service needs of unaccompanied immigrant youth. At Berkeley, she teaches MSW courses and mentors students through her Immigration and Child Welfare Research Lab.
Kurt C. Organista
Professor & Harry and Riva Specht Chair in Publicly Supported Social Services and Director of the Institute for the Study of Societal Issues (ISSI), Professor in the School of Social Welfare
His research focuses on psychosocial and health issues in Chicano/Latino communities, including HIV prevention with migrant laborers, minority mental health, and acculturation. He teaches the American Cultures course Race, Ethnic Relations, and Social Welfare in the United States, and is the author of Solving Latino Psychosocial and Health Problems: Theory, Research, and Practice (2nd ed.) and HIV Prevention with Latinos: Theory, Research and Practice, the first collection of texts on HIV prevention across diverse Latino populations.
Victor M. Ortega-Jimenez
Assistant Professor of Integrative Biology
He earned his BS, MS, and PhD in Biology in Mexico. His research focuses on the biomechanics of living systems and how organisms interact with complex environments such as rain, turbulence, and fluid surfaces. By studying species ranging from insects to birds, his lab investigates the principles that underlie form and function, as well as the trade-offs imposed by physical forces like capillarity and electrostatics. Integrating experimental and computational approaches, his work has led to the design of bio-inspired robots capable of navigating unsteady aerial and aquatic conditions. A notable discovery revealed how flamingos create vortex traps with their feet, beak, and head movements to capture plankton, inspiring advances in robotics. He has published more than 30 scientific papers, and his research has been featured in international media including The New York Times, National Geographic, NPR, and BBC.
Laura E. Pérez
Professor of Ethnic Studies and Chair of the Latinx Research Center
Her research, publishing, and curation explore Latinx art and spirituality, as discussed in a recent MoMA interview on altars, eroticism, and the “mundane sacred.” She co-curated Amalia Mesa-Bains: Archaeology of Memory, a major retrospective that traveled nationally after opening at BAMPFA in 2023 and was named one of the defining exhibitions of 2024 by ARTnews. Her recent publication, "Luchita Hurtado: Self-Portraiture, “Mountain and Leopard,” appeared in The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism (2025). Since 2018, Pérez has led the LRC in securing major state and foundation funding to support faculty research, undergraduate fellowships, graduate dissertation writing, symposia, and public programming in Latinx Studies.