Meet Our Staff

Ralph Leaño Atanacio
Co-Director

pronouns: they/them

I am a 1.5 gen queer Filipinx immigrant who grew up in unceded Ohlone land on the borders of Daly City and SF) and am now based in Oakland. I bring in experience working with young people from mentoring in college access programs, leading social justice education at the Spot Youth Center and organizing college students as a political education and leadership development chair with APASD. I deepened my relationship to grassroots organizing in 2017 as a Lavender Phoenix Summer Organizer and shortly after as a core committee member and trainer for their leadership development programs.

I lead with love, actively cultivating relationships with people and land that feels expansive and liberatory. And in leading with love, I also lead with abundance, practicing the belief that we are enough for ourselves, each other, and for our work towards liberation.

My journey in the movement started because so many people believed in my power as a young person, at a time when I didn’t believe in my abilities or understood what I can do as a young person to address oppression in my communities. Organizers created spaces for me when I was struggling to find the language, community, and support to be my whole self. I do this work so young people can have transformative experiences like me, where young people find belonging, joy, and agency to organize and build towards their liberation.

A fun fact: If I fall asleep on public transit I will always wake up before my stop.

Alyssa Mamaclay
Lead Youth Organizer

pronouns: she/they/siya

I am a proud 1.5-gen Filipinx immigrant, the eldest daughter of working-class parents, and a first-generation college graduate born in the Philippines and raised in the Bay Area. For now, I  call the Central Valley home. I studied Public Health with a minor in Data Science at Cal State East Bay, grounding my work in both community health and the power of data to tell our stories.

Every step of my journey has prepared me for my role today. As a tenant organizer with Filipino Advocates for Justice, I learned what it meant to stand alongside families fighting for housing security. As a Policy Fellow with AAPI FORCE-EF, I saw how advocacy and legislative power could uplift AAPI communities. As a coalition coordinator, researcher, and mentor, I built bridges between grassroots organizing, policy advocacy, and youth leadership development. These experiences taught me that organizing must be rooted in care, equity, and collective strength.

Now, as Lead Youth Organizer at South Bay Youth Changemakers (SBYC), I bring these lessons together with my lived experiences. I lead with love, abundance, and care, believing that young people already hold the power we need to move toward liberation. My own journey was shaped because organizers created spaces where I could find belonging, language, and courage when I doubted myself. I do this work so young people can also experience that transformation–discovering joy, agency, and collective purpose in organizing for justice and the world we all deserve.

 A fun fact: I’m training for my first powerlifting meet in 2026!


Amulya Mandava
Co-Director

pronouns: she/her

I’m a 2nd generation Indian American who grew up here in Santa Clara County. I left the area for college at age 18, and have spent the past few decades learning about the ins and outs of social change. As an anthropologist, I researched, wrote, and taught about social movements and approaches to addressing inequality in the US and India. As a labor organizer with the United Auto Workers, I fought for fair union contracts with my own co-workers and with workers across the country. And I’ve advocated for an end to sexual harassment and violence in higher education as a Title IX complainant, harassment case handler, and ultimately as a plaintiff in a landmark civil rights lawsuit.

Through these experiences I’ve come to believe that organizing is a key pathway to transforming our worlds and building truly democratic power for the long haul—and that all of us are capable of contributing to this transformation.

I recently returned home to the South Bay with a deep desire to invest in and learn from my community. I’m proud to serve as a Co-Director of SBYC, where everyday I see youth stepping into their power to imagine and build a just future for our region and beyond. I hope you'll join our group of truly hilarious, talented, curious and caring staff and members!

A fun fact: I love divination tools of all kinds. Ask me to read tarot for you!

Vivian Kuang
Lead Youth Organizer

pronouns: she/her

I am a 2nd generation Chinese American who grew up in Fremont and the Tri-Valley. I graduated from UC Berkeley, where I studied Political Economy and was involved in Asian American student organizing.

My journey in movement work started in the decarceration and abolition space, where I did research and advocacy work at the Ella Baker Center for Human Rights and the Vera Institute of Justice. Later on, I was introduced to organizing through Asian American student spaces at Berkeley. Learning about Asian American movement history in the Bay Area, especially youth movements, inspired me to be part of that history in my own way, whether it was by researching these histories of survival and resistance, or organizing with Asian Pacific American Student Development (APASD).

Organizing, and the experiences and relationships I have gained through it, has deeply shaped me and my worldview. It has helped me understand my personal experiences and the communities I grew up in through an entirely different light. It has helped me step into my power and wholeness in resistance of capitalism and model minority culture, and taught me how to be in meaningful solidarity with others. Each day I organize, I feel a little bit more transformed, and I do this work so that other young people can be transformed in their own way. My hope is that through this space, we can collectively heal, grow, and become co-conspirators in a truly liberated future

A fun fact: I am an art/media/pop culture nerd and love to catalog, analyze, and review the books, music, films, etc. I consume!

 

Youth Members

SBYC’s core membership is made up of youth aged 13-18 from all across Santa Clara County. Although SBYC centers the Asian American youth experience, we welcome all young people who agree with our mission, vision, and values. We encourage young people of different ethnicities, socioeconomic status, schools, cities, and towns to get involved with us!

 

Our Core Values

Digging at the Roots

We must examine the root causes of the problems around us and understand how all issues are connected to each other through larger systems of oppression such as white supremacy, patriarchy, and capitalism. We believe that our work must be grounded in a clear understanding of root causes.

Personal Transformation

Social change can only happen if we transform ourselves. We believe in examining how systems of oppression affect our mind, body, and spirit. We believe in learning, unlearning, and relearning in the pursuit of a better future.

Being Our Full Selves

Personal transformation requires us to show up as our full selves. We need to embrace authenticity and vulnerability: to feel, think, and be all aspects of us. Through our transformative relationships, we challenge each other to engage in hard conversations and navigate conflict in ways that honor our full humanity.

Movement Building

We can’t win what our communities deserve if we work in isolation or competition. We believe in building strategic, interdependent relationships with other organizations and people so that our movements can achieve liberation.

Innovation

Oppressive ideologies diminish our capacity to dream of the worlds we want to build and how to get there. To combat this, we experiment, lean into creativity, and make new mistakes.

Centering Youth Leadership

Young people have unique wisdom and creativity necessary to lead our communities through the urgent crises of our time towards a better world. We believe in developing young leaders who can advance our movements for social justice.