A person with short, light blonde hair and blue eyes smiles softly. They are wearing a black, checkered button-up shirt and are posed in front of a plain, light background.

beck Haberstroh

Senior Manager, Safety Training & Education

beck Haberstroh (they, them) is the Senior Manager of Safety Training & Education at PEN America. In their role, they focus on developing resources, workshops, and other forms of support that meet the digital safety needs of authors, librarians, and faculty. They regularly collaborate with unions, professional associations, community groups, publishers and others to host trainings and events addressing topics such as doxing defense, peer support, and online abuse response protocols.

Haberstroh’s background weaves together a passion for education, the arts, organizing and technology justice. Before coming to PEN America, they taught courses in writing, media, photography, film and performance at the University of California, San Diego and were recognized with a Graduate Teaching Scholar Fellowship. They also worked in education and public programs at Pioneer Works, an interdisciplinary arts space, and Genspace, a community biology lab, both in New York City. As an artist, their work has been shared in Zoom rooms, museums, public parks, black box theaters and galleries. Their writing has been published by Nothing Personal, HereIn, Paper Cameras Press, Syllabus Project, imaginedTheatres and SCREEN_.

Haberstroh has a BA with honors from Brown University and an MFA in visual art from UCSD.


Articles by beck Haberstroh

A woman with long brown hair smiles at the camera on the left; on the right, a large illuminated “UMB” sign is shown on the side of a building. Photo credit: University of Maryland, Baltimore/Matthew P. D’Agostino.
Online Abuse & Digital Safety
Friday May 29

What It’s Like To Get Placed On A Professor Watchlist

Like many others on watchlists, Dr. Cheung landed at the center of national media attention and a virulent online harassment campaign. 

A stack of four books sits on a wooden table in a library, with tall bookshelves filled with books blurred in the background.
Online Abuse & Digital Safety
Thursday May 28

Librarians increasingly face online abuse. Here are three steps they can take to protect themselves.

Despite the prevalence and impact of harassment campaigns, librarians and educators are not powerless and they are not alone.