Elijah Baucom
Director
Social sector organizations, including journalists, human rights defenders, and social justice activists, are critical drivers of social change. Their work is essential for healthy democracies, human rights, and justice to thrive.
But as technology becomes more important to their operations, these organizations face growing threats, like cyberattacks, targeted surveillance, online harassment, and the spread of disinformation.
Many lack the resources to secure their digital operations. The UC Berkeley Cybersecurity Clinic is empowering social sector organizations to use technology to fulfill their missions, defend against digital threats, and build digital capabilities so they can drive social change.
The UC Berkeley Cybersecurity Clinic is a trailblazing interdisciplinary, public-interest digital security clinic within the University of California, Berkeley’s Center for Long-Term Cybersecurity. Through a model similar to university clinics in law and medicine, we train teams of students to help social sector organizations build the capabilities they need to proactively defend themselves against malicious governments, powerful corporations, hate groups, and extremists.
We’ve trained over 185 students since 2018, drawn from nearly two dozen academic specialties at UC Berkeley, and have served 25 non-profit clients on 4 continents ranging from women’s reproductive rights organizations to LGBTQ and international indigenous rights groups. Nearly half of the clinic alumni are women.
We are proud to be a founding member of the Consortium of Cybersecurity Clinics, an international network of university-based cybersecurity clinicians, trainers, and advocates committed to sharing best practices, expanding the reach and visibility of cybersecurity clinics, and lowering the barriers for other institutions of higher education to successfully establish their own clinics. Download a one-page overview to learn more about the Consortium’s priorities and opportunities for support.
The UC Berkeley Cybersecurity Clinic is enabling social sector organizations to use technology to fulfill their missions. We are training the next generation of digital security leaders. And we are forging a new community around public-interest technology.
The Citizen Clinic Cybersecurity Education Center is designed to share the Clinic’s pioneering cybersecurity resources for social sector organizations, and to help other academic institutions that may be interested in establishing their own cybersecurity clinics. The site includes past and current Citizen Clinic curricula, reading lists, and syllabi, as well as a link to our Baseline Organizational Security Guide.
“The [UC Berkeley Cybersecurity Clinic] was absolutely a unique and rewarding experience for me. It allowed me to immediately put what I learned in cybersecurity into practice, and was the fastest way to fully understand how the course material really plays out in organizations who are lacking the cybersecurity knowledge or resources to protect themselves. The Clinic is made up of a very academically and professionally diverse group of students — we were able to use our respective areas of expertise while stregnthening our existing knowledge and experience and gaining new familiarity in cybersecurity.”
Zaina Siyed, clinic alumna participant, UCB Interdisciplinary Studies 2023
“Our team created a cybersecurity playbook for a nonprofit law firm that advocates for human and environmental rights in developing countries. Working with incredible thought leaders in the tech, law, and human rights space fueled my passion for social impact by eradicating the digital divide through safe cybersecurity practices and access to information.”
Boikanyo Tefu, clinic alumna participant, UCB Master of Journalism 2020, Multimedia Journalist and Content Manager at the UC Berkeley School of Law’s Human Rights Center
“My goal is to improve information technologies that support communities and civil society. The I School and [the UC Berkeley Cybersecurity Clinic] have given me the skills and confidence to be a better advocate for users and socially conscious products. I’m excited to bring this knowledge to my new role as a Program Manager at Microsoft’s Artificial Intelligence and Research group.”
Lily Lin, clinic alumna participant, UCB Masters of Information Management 2019