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Home > About > Mission & History
UCSA's Mission
The University of California Student Association (UCSA) is a coalition of
students and student governments that aims to provide a collective voice for all
students through advocacy and direct action. UCSA participates in the shared governance
of the University of California system, and seeks to advance higher education by
empowering current and future students to advocate on their own behalf for the accessibility,
affordability, and quality of the University of California system.
UCSA's History
UCSA's history parallels students' broader struggle for social change. In 1964, the Free Speech
Movement marked the beginning of a new era of student demands for participation in the governance
of the University. This coincided with campus unrest due to the Civil Rights Movement and the
escalating Vietnam War. In the 1960's and early 1970's students confronted authorities both on campuses
and in the halls of the State Capitol.
Student Body Presidents' Council
The need for systemwide organizing became apparent as UC students resisted an onslaught of punitive
measures directed at them as a result of their increased activism. Student leaders responded by
forming the Student Body Presidents' Council (SBPC), which was comprised of all the undergraduate and
graduate student body presidents. The purpose of SBPC was "to serve the collective interests of
students of the University of California by promoting cooperation between various student government
associations of the several campuses of the University, and by representing these interests to the
Regents of the University, the Administration, and the State Legislature." SBPC laid the foundation
for the Universitywide student association which eventually evolved into UCSA.
Meanwhile, lobbying efforts at the State Capitol remained sporadic even though then Governor Ronald
Reagan sought to raise student fees and legislators introduced dozens of bills to punish campus radicals
and the "lenient" University. Students found it difficult to maintain the ongoing presence necessary to
lobby effectively against such measures.
UC Student Lobby
On February 11, 1971, SBPC established the UC Student Lobby to ensure students a permanent voice in the
State Capitol. The UC Student Lobby, with professional staff, served as the advocacy arm of SBPC, and
each campus set up a Lobby Annex to organize grassroots campaign efforts. Within a few years, the UC
Student Lobby won several significant budget and legislative battles on behalf of students, and developed
` a reputation as an influential lobbying organization in Sacramento.
UCSA Emerges from Reorganization
As SBPC and the UC Student Lobby's effectiveness and visibility increased, so did confusion about their
relationship with each other. Campus student governance began to demand greater attention of Student Body
Presidents, and, over time, membership of SBPC shifted primarily to representatives appointed by the
Presidents or elected by the student body. Soon the name "Student Body Presidents' Council" did not accurately
reflect its membership, although its purpose remained the same.
In addition to its identification problem, SBPC was overshadowed by the UC Student Lobby, which captured
the attention of the campus media and student body, in part because its name was clearly associated with UC
students. Many students and others did not understand that SBPC governed and directed the UC Student Lobby.
Therefore, in 1985, as part of an effort to consolidate all systemwide lobbying efforts under one title,
SBPC changed its name to the University of California Student Association. SBPC members became members of the
UCSA Board of Directors. By Regental action, the University recognized UCSA as the official systemwide association
of campus student governments. In the process, the UC Student Lobby name was shelved although some legislators
still refer to UCSA as "The Student Lobby." The UC Student Lobby became the UCSA Sacramento Office and remained
the statewide headquarters for UCSA. At the campus level, the Lobby Annexes were referred to as UCSA Campus Offices.
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