Rhode Island ACLU Calls Suspension of Brown Student Group ‘Chilling’

In an open letter to Brown University leadership, the Rhode Island ACLU calls on the school to reinstate the school’s Students for Justice in Palestine chapter. The group has been suspended since allegations of escalations at an Oct. 18 protest went public

Students protest outside of a Brown Corporation Board meeting in Feb. 2024.
Students protest outside of a Brown Corporation Board meeting in Feb. 2024.
Olivia Ebertz / The Public’s Radio
Share
Students protest outside of a Brown Corporation Board meeting in Feb. 2024.
Students protest outside of a Brown Corporation Board meeting in Feb. 2024.
Olivia Ebertz / The Public’s Radio
Rhode Island ACLU Calls Suspension of Brown Student Group ‘Chilling’
Copy

The Rhode Island affiliate of the American Civil Liberties Union released a letter it sent to Brown University, criticizing school leaders over the suspension of a campus chapter of Students for Justice in Palestine. Steven Brown, the executive director of RI ACLU, said the school’s decision is a blow to free speech on campuses and the university should re-instate the chapter immediately.

“By continuing to suspend what is a clearly political, if controversial student group on campus, we’re concerned that the university is sending the wrong message,” Brown said.

The university suspended its SJP chapter following a pro-divestment protest during a Brown Corporation Board meeting on Oct. 18, 2024. According to Brown University Vice President for Campus Life Russell Carey, Brown administrators, board members and staff reported witnessing protesters “banging on a vehicle carrying members of the community, physically blocking passage of a vehicle, screaming profanity at individuals at close and personal range, profanity and a racial epithet directed toward a person of color, and following and screaming at individuals while filming them.”

Following the protest, members of SJP’s leadership team were informed their group would be suspended and that the school was launching an external investigation into the group.

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

Environmental officials say emergency policy lets municipalities and facilities dispose of excess snow in waterways
Wait for the Coast Guard and Army Corps of Engineers to sign off has been more than 90 days
Attorney General Peter Neronha’s long-awaited report resulted in new indictments for 4 one-time priests and identifies 75 credibly accused priests and more than 300 victims, concluding church leaders repeatedly prioritized avoiding scandal over protecting children
Our planet is getting hotter, but at the same time, snowstorms seem to be getting bigger. In the wake of Rhode Island’s record-setting blizzard, we’re looking back at a 2022 episode of Possibly that explains what’s going on
From free tax assistance and a banned book club discussion of The Handmaid’s Tale to an AI and youth forum and a massive CD, DVD and vinyl sale, here’s what’s happening across Providence’s nine community libraries this month