Press ReleasesFree Speech
ACTA Releases New Trustee Guide on Campus Encampments
As the 2024–2025 academic year gets underway, news reports are predicting another wave of protests on American college campuses that...
Colleges and universities face renewed danger in the coming academic year. There is no doubt that the demonstrators will be back, louder and more determined. They will be better organized, well-funded, and will certainly have legal counsel and media by their side. More campuses will likely be affected. Sadly, the protesters will again show little respect for the time and generosity that the trustees devote to their institutions, or the wisdom and insight that they bring to higher education governance. Although this time their demands focus on Israel, if a precedent of capitulation to divestment pressure succeeds now, schools can be assured that they will be subject to similar tactics for other sociopolitical causes.
This brief guide will explain why an educational institution should adopt a position of strict institutional neutrality, as an increasing number of schools have done, following the wisdom of the University of Chicago in its Kalven Report. Institutional neutrality empowers colleges and universities to pursue their true mission of teaching and research, rather than serving as a largely ineffective and marginal political platform. Such a policy protects and fosters the freedom of expression and freedom of thought that are the lifeblood of liberal education. And it allows the institution to invest its funds subject only to the financial professionals whose duty it is to look after the strength of its portfolio. As fiduciaries of the institution, moreover, trustees who make decisions about the portfolio on grounds other than best financial practice could even be held personally liable for breach of fiduciary responsibility.
As the 2024–2025 academic year gets underway, news reports are predicting another wave of protests on American college campuses that...
The spring semester of 2024 was a national and international disgrace for American higher education, very far from our boast of being the envy of the world. At home and abroad, the public saw images of encampments, occupations of campus buildings, noisome antisemitic harassment, and presidents of prestigious universities unable to control their campuses or […]
Launched in 1995, we are the only organization that works with alumni, donors, trustees, and education leaders across the United States to support liberal arts education, uphold high academic standards, safeguard the free exchange of ideas on campus, and ensure that the next generation receives an intellectually rich, high-quality college education at an affordable price.
Discover MoreSign up to receive updates on the most pressing issues facing our college campuses.