In an email sent this afternoon, PrezBo announced his support for the University’s divestment from companies engaged in the operation of private prisons. A recommendation will come before the Board of Trustees in their next meeting in June.
On March 31, ACSRI (the Advisory Committee on Socially Responsible Investing) voted to recommend prison divestment to the Trustees, and this represents, in the words of PrezBo, the “culmination of thoughtful analysis and hard work by ACSRI and by…students, faculty, and alumni.”
PrezBo also touched on the issue of fossil fuel divestment, which ASCRI has been discussing since 2013, in today’s message. He vocalized his hope that the “conversation” on climate change remain in the forefront, and he alluded that at an “appropriate time during the next academic year” this issue too will come before the Trustees.
Here is the email in full:
Dear fellow members of the Columbia community:
I am writing to provide an update on the progress of two pending proposals regarding Columbia University’s investments: divestment from companies engaged in the operation of private prisons and divestment from fossil fuels.
The issue of mass incarceration in America weighs heavily on our country, our city, and our University community. The student group Columbia Prison Divest has been a vocal and valued champion for private prison divestment and the Advisory Committee on Socially Responsible Investing (ACSRI), led this year by Jeffrey Gordon, Richard Paul Richman Professor of Law, has been examining this issue.
On March 31, 2015, ACSRI resolved to recommend to the Trustees that the University divest any direct stock ownership interests in companies engaged in the operation of private prisons and refrain from making subsequent investments in such companies. I support this recommendation, which represents the culmination of thoughtful analysis and hard work by ACSRI and by our students, faculty, and alumni. The recommendation will be taken up by the University’s Trustees at their next scheduled meeting in June.
Climate change is one of the most important issues of our time. Columbia is home to some of the foremost scholars in this field and our University community is engaged meaningfully in this issue in a number of ways, one being the ongoing discussion regarding divesting University funds from fossil fuels.
Since 2013, a subcommittee of ACSRI has been working diligently to address this complicated subject. The student group Columbia Divest for Climate Justice has petitioned for fossil fuel divestment and has kept this issue at the forefront of campus conversation, exactly where it belongs. I anticipate that at an appropriate time during the next academic year, this matter also will come before our Trustees. In the near term, I will arrange for the Trustees to hear directly from student leaders on this subject. There is more work to be done, but I support the ongoing deliberations of the ACSRI subcommittee and it is my hope to see a resolution to this complex but vitally important issue within the year.
I deeply appreciate the thoughtful and substantive work of ACSRI, and of all students, faculty, alumni, and administrators who are committed to these efforts.
Sincerely,
Lee C. Bollinger
Image courtesy of Columbia Prison Divest
9 Comments
@Anonymous So he doesn’t like prison guard raping thugs but he doesn’t mind Jonathan Cole bragging about raping the families of undergrads?
@Anonymous What about putting fossils like Ahmabolinguad in the prisons? Isn’t that like shilling two grant grubbing bidders with one scone?
@Jeremy Hope that everything in this matter is set right soon!
@CC '14 I’d really really love to see the Columbia Prison Divest group commend this move. It would convince me that they’re acting to improve the university and not just poke holes in its moral fabric.
@Anonymous Hey, if divest rallies were good enough for Bambama
@alumnus Sounds like a classy move on the part of Bollinger. Hopefully this will not invite an excessive politicization of investment decisions– everything in higher education seems to be politicized these days and it would be best that not everything were– but this seems like a most appropriate place to draw the line on profiteering.
@SEAS '14 “On March 31, 2015, ACSRI resolved to recommend to the Trustees that the University divest any direct stock ownership interests in companies engaged in the operation of private prisons and refrain from making subsequent investments in such companies.”
Those who understand the Yale model of endowment investing will realize this is pretty meaningless. Ownership will tend to come indirectly, from stakes in Hedge Funds and PE Funds… That being said great job for this minor victory.
@alum Congratulations Columbia Prison Divest!!!! This is amazing!
@Trustee WE ARE THE TRUSTEEEEeeeees