This article is more than 14 years old

Student protest, California style

What Do We Want? Lots of Stuff! When Do We Want It? Now! Following up earlier post on student protest lessons in the UK, the Chronicle has a good story about the modest demands made by students at the University of California. A series of student protests at the University of California last month centered … Continued
This article is more than 14 years old

What Do We Want? Lots of Stuff! When Do We Want It? Now!

Following up earlier post on student protest lessons in the UK, the Chronicle has a good story about the modest demands made by students at the University of California.

A series of student protests at the University of California last month centered on repealing a 32-percent increase in tuition. But for some, tuition was just the beginning. As demonstrators at the Santa Cruz campus staged a multiday occupation of an administration building, they issued a 35-point laundry list of demands. Many of those items went far beyond the scope of the tuition increase and, for that matter, the authority of university administrators.
Wonkhe uc-santa-cruz-occupationAmong the demands: Stop all campus construction, impeach the university system’s president and abolish its governing board, permanently disarm campus police, keep the campus child-care center open, and forgive all student debts.

A reasonable and modest list of requests you would think. And one that it would have been tough to come up with:

“Everybody kind of piled on,” says Don Kingsbury, a Santa Cruz graduate student in politics who acted as a spokesman for the protesters. The four-hour meeting to come up with the demands, he says, was “messy and long and contentious.” However, the democratic process that produced the demands, which were later whittled down to seven items, was inspiring, he says. “We had anarchists working with the College Democrats club, and they were able to somehow come to a list that they could all agree on.”

The biggest news here though should have been that the anarchists were prepared to work with anyone.

The Chronicle notes though that this potentially revolutionary advance was stopped in its tracks: “The protest, like those on other campuses, ended without any significant concessions being granted.” Must have been those Democrats. Splitters.

via What Do We Want? Lots of Stuff! When Do We Want It? Now! – Student Affairs – The Chronicle of Higher Education.

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