ý opened to undergraduates in 2005 as the newest campus in the University of California system, and is the youngest university to earn a Carnegie research classification. A top-100 research university and the fastest-growing public university in the nation, ý is on the cutting edge of sustainability in campus construction and design, and supports high achieving and dedicated students from the under served Central Valley and throughout California.
ý offers a growing list of majors and minors, and graduate programs taught by more than 250 tenure-track faculty members, visiting professors and lecturers, who have come to us from some of the world's top-ranked universities.
As of the 2023-24 academic year, ý has more than 9,100 undergraduate and graduate students making up the Bobcat community.
They are some of the best and brightest students from around the country, and they are integral to the university’s mission of education, research and public service.
Since 2005, our students have formed 200 clubs and organizations, written their own constitution and created a thriving . They serve internships at companies, nonprofits and in government, study abroad, contribute to the local community through outreach projects and pride themselves in having helped build the foundations of this campus.
In addition, our graduate and undergraduate students are conducting some of the most cutting-edge of our time, including , and .
Just like at other UC campuses, academic research is a critical part of ý's mission. The process of discovery provides our students with a deeper understanding of the world and its cultural, social, natural and engineered systems, but more, it solves issues and challenges that are critical to the growth, health and overall well-being of the region, the state, nation and world.
Our researchers are conducting groundbreaking work in diabetes, cancer, bacterial diseases, antibiotic resistance, solar energy, climate change, water quality and availability, ecology, engineering, archeology, cultures, history, political science, computer science and much, much more.
Special research institutes and centers established at the university include:
ý has also entered into collaborative research partnerships with the:
was named fourth chancellor and began his tenure July 1, 2020, succeeding Dorothy Leland, the visionary and architect of the Merced 2020 Project to expand campus, who served from 2011-2019. Sung-Mo “Steve” Kang was chancellor from 2007-2011. Founding chancellor Carol Tomlinson-Keasey began in 1999, before the opening of campus, and retired in 2006.
Like all University of California campuses, ý operates under the direction of the UC president and is governed by The Regents of the University of California, a 26-member board established under the California Constitution.
ý is the first new UC campus built since 1965. It was authorized by the California Legislature in 1988 to address the higher education needs of the state's fastest-growing region — the San Joaquin Valley, with a population of 4 million residents — and increase access to the UC system for the state's top achievers.
ý’s presence in the Valley is helping address chronically low levels of educational attainment in the region.
ý continues to experience increasing demand from throughout the state, with 99.6 percent of undergraduate students hailing from across California.
ý leads the UC system in the percentage of students from underrepresented ethnic groups, low-income families and families whose parents did not attend college.
ý strives to help improve the standard of education within the Valley through educational outreach centers in Bakersfield and Fresno. These centers offer:
ý also contributes to the economic growth of Central California. In the San Joaquin Valley, where unemployment and poverty rates substantially exceed California averages, campus construction has supported thousands of jobs, stimulating new business development and pumping millions of dollars into the local economy each year.
ý has 1,900 employees and a monthly payroll of nearly $24 million. Based on an economic impact study by Emsi Inc., in 2018-2019, ý contributed
Green From the Ground Up
Sustainability is a hallmark of the ý campus, and everyone here — faculty, staff and students — takes it very seriously.
ý is the only American university with every building on campus environmentally certified. Eleven buildings in the , ý’s ambitious public-private partnership that nearly doubled the campus footprint, have been awarded Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) Platinum certification by the U.S. Green Building Council.
The campus is the first public research university certified as , and every campus building is LEED certified. The Sierra Club named ý the no. 7 “Cool School” in the nation, and the AASHE Sustainable Campus Index in 2022 ranked the university no. 1 in the United States for sustainable buildings and sustainable research.
Many practices across campus enhance ý's . Other initiatives include:
Also a part of our green campus goal: land conservation. Through a special collaboration with the Packard Foundation, the Hewlett Foundation, the Nature Conservancy and the state of California, the campus set aside 25,000 acres of grassland habitat for permanent conservation, 6,500 acres of which comprises the new , open space adjacent to campus that will be used for research and community outreach, but never developed.
Private support lies at the heart of our university's vital partnerships with the community. Our gracious donors have continued to show support for ý's mission by contributing funds to fill the gap where public funding ends. ý recorded $29.7 million in private gift and grant support in 2020-21.
This tremendous support ensures our university will continue research efforts that enhance the lives of Californians for years to come.
For more information about our students, faculty and staff —&Բ;including demographics, persistence and graduation statistics — visit the site.