This page resurrects and extends an archive of news coverage, social media, and announcements since 2014 related to the Swatdivest, Sunrise Movement, and Swarthmore Mountain Justice. As we work to reorganize and migrate the data to this site, please bear with us. This is a work in progress.
Swarthmore College will not drop fossil fuel stocks from its $1.9 billion endowment, the school’s board of managers announced on Saturday. The board engaged in “extensive preparation, analysis, and robust discussion and debate” leading up to the decision, Gil Kemp, its chairman, said in a statement.
After a 32-day sit-in outside the Swarthmore College finance and investments office, a resolution of support from the faculty and a petition bearing 1,100 alumni signatures, Swarthmore Mountain Justice members were hopeful the board of managers would divest the college’s endowment of fossil fuel funds as a major step towards halting climate change.
Swarthmore College’s board announced Saturday that the college will not sell holdings in companies in the fossil fuel industry, a move sought by a long student sit-in and endorsed by many other students and faculty members.
Despite a large student protest and strong activist sentiment among its students and alumni, Swarthmore College opted to not divest its $1.9 billion endowment from fossil fuels after a vote by its board of managers on Saturday.
Divestment At Swarthmore And ‘Hard Choice’ Foolishness The college and university student campaign to divest from fossil fuels as a protest against climate change began at Swarthmore College. It was therefore surprising when the board that overseas that institution’s investments recently voted against divestment. Or maybe it wasn’t very surprising after all.
Mark Ralston/AFP/Getty The fossil-fuel divestment movement has divided academia. On 24 April, SOAS University of London announced that it would sell off all of its investments in fossil-fuel companies within three years. Days later, the New York University (NYU) senate voted to recommend that the university keep its current fossil-fuel investments, but to develop a greener strategy for the future.
Posted: 05/17/2015 12:01:00 AM MDT The University of Colorado, Ivy League Harvard University and small, elite Swarthmore College have at least one thing in common: a decision to hang on to their investments in fossil fuel companies. Meanwhile about 100 universities and foundations, including Stanford University and Syracuse University, have committed to divest all or part of their fossil fuel investments.
A Pennsylvania high school just made history. George School in Newtown announced April 27 that it would divest its $150 million endowment of holdings in coal mining companies, likely becoming the first secondary school in the nation to join the global movement to rid investment portfolios of fossil fuel stocks.
Five years ago Swarthmore Mountain Justice was formed by Swarthmore College students as a way to halt destructive climate change by advocating for the college’s board of managers to divest Swarthmore’s $1.9 billion endowment of fossil fuel funds.