Referendum Shows Most Undergraduate Respondents Oppose Brown University Leadership

The results of a new vote suggest many undergraduates lack faith in the school’s governing body

File photo. A group of Brown University students face University Hall at a pro-Palestinian protest in November 2023.
File photo. A group of Brown University students face University Hall at a pro-Palestinian protest in November 2023.
Olivia Ebertz/The Public’s Radio
Share
File photo. A group of Brown University students face University Hall at a pro-Palestinian protest in November 2023.
File photo. A group of Brown University students face University Hall at a pro-Palestinian protest in November 2023.
Olivia Ebertz/The Public’s Radio
Referendum Shows Most Undergraduate Respondents Oppose Brown University Leadership
Copy

According to a referendum distributed by Brown’s Undergraduate Council of Students, 73% of undergraduate respondents are unhappy with Brown University’s corporate leadership and would like at least one person on the Brown Corporate Board representing undergraduates. The council said that 26% of the undergraduate student body responded to the referendum.

The students who conducted the referendum say it shows a deep divide between the student body and the university’s leadership, who have been at odds over pro-Palestinian activism on campus for over a year now. But Brian Clark, a spokesperson for the university, said the referendum offers the opinion of just “a portion of one specific group of constituents,” and underscored that the results do not require the school to take any action. Any changes to the structure of Brown’s governance would have to be approved by the current board, Clark said.

Isaac Slevin is a member of the Undergraduate Student Council. He said that besides showing students’ upset over the Brown Corporation’s decision not to divest from companies students say profit from human rights abuses in the Palestinian territories, the results also highlight that students would like more meaningful decision-making power, beyond being members of advisory bodies and other forms of campus governance that currently exist.

“There’s less incentive to engage in these performative committees,” said Slevin.

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

The Pulitzer Prize-winning scholar of the American Revolution taught at Brown University for decades and was one of the country’s most influential historians
The legislation comes after a scathing report that detailed decades of clergy abuse and potential cover-ups within the Diocese of Providence
Why is progress on the state’s top hurdles so elusive?
A new state report lays out the numbers behind a familiar problem: fewer doctors, longer waits and growing barriers to care
Wilbury’s ‘Girl from the North Country’ brings Bob Dylan’s music to a moving Great Depression-era story, while the Gamm’s ‘Cat on a Hot Tin Roof’ delivers big performances for a towering classic
The Rhode Island Foundation CEO says fixing the state’s school funding formula is urgent for students, the economy and Rhode Island’s future