Brown Votes Against Divestment From Companies With Ties to Israel

A university committee found that the school had no direct investments in the companies identified by pro-Palestine student activists

Student activists at an encampment at Brown University's campus in Providence, April 2024.
Student activists at an encampment at Brown University’s campus in Providence, April 2024.
Olivia Ebertz/The Public’s Radio
Share
Student activists at an encampment at Brown University's campus in Providence, April 2024.
Student activists at an encampment at Brown University’s campus in Providence, April 2024.
Olivia Ebertz/The Public’s Radio
Brown Votes Against Divestment From Companies With Ties to Israel
Copy

Brown University will not divest from 10 companies that student activists said facilitated “the Israeli occupation of Palestinian territory.”

The Corporation of Brown University, the university’s governing body, voted Tuesday to support the recommendation of the Advisory Committee on University Resources Management (ACURM) against divestment, according to a press release issued on Wednesday.

ACURM found that “Brown has no direct investments in any of the companies targeted for divestment and that any indirect exposure for Brown in these companies is so small that it could not be directly responsible for social harm,” University Chancellor Brian T. Moynihan and President Christina H. Paxson wrote in an open letter explaining the corporation’s vote.

This story was reported by The Public’s Radio. You can read the entire story here.

The Community Libraries of Providence offer a slew of free programming every week for kids and adults at their nine locations around the city. We highlight a few of these events in our monthly community libraries segment – from a local author fair to a conversation about death doulas
A Wyoming-based firm has agreed to buy the Sunny Acres Trailer Park for $13 million. Because Rhode Island law grants trailer park residents a right of first refusal, Sharlene Patton is trying to convince her neighbors to buy the park themselves
A reprieve for the end of SNAP benefits, and Mayor Smiley on housing and other top Providence issues
A federal judge in Providence has ordered the USDA to release emergency funds to restore food assistance, siding with Rhode Island nonprofits and cities nationwide that sued over the shutdown’s freeze on SNAP benefits
The nonprofit trying to buy Roger Williams Medical Center and Our Lady of Fatima Hospital is still struggling to close its financing