Over 300 Harvard professors sign letter urging Harvard to negotiate with protesters
Over 300 Harvard University professors have signed a letter to the university urging "constructive dialogue" with the peaceful protesters on campus.
"We are concerned that the university has yet to meet with the students to hear their concerns. Instead, the administration has issued escalating threats of punitive disciplinary action, the severity of which the university has not seen in decades," professors wrote.
"We urge the administration to meet and engage in meaningful dialogue with peacefully protesting students," the letter said.
The letter, sent to interim President Alan Garber and interim Provost John F. Manning Tuesday, came after Harvard warned protesters to empty their encampment. The professors are urging Harvard's administration to follow the lead of Brown University and Northwestern University, where encampments ended after school leadership agreed to take steps toward divestment.
"I think so many of us signed this letter because, as faculty, we have a duty of care towards our students. The harshness and scale of the proposed punishment is unprecedented and frankly alarming; these are activities that should be met with dialogue, not punishment," Teju Cole, a Gore Vidal professor of the practice of creative writing at Harvard, said in a statement.
"We are calling on the administration to be fair-minded and set these protests in the context of numerous other protests that have happened here in the past, in response to which the university did the right thing," Cole said.