From the Columbia University Chapter of the AAUP, for immediate release: July 29, 2025
The Agreement between the federal government and Columbia University announced on July 24, 2025, has been presented as a settlement of Title VI violations, specifically the university’s alleged failure to curtail bias and harassment directed toward Jewish faculty, staff, and students. However, as has been pointed out by several of our colleagues, the statutory processes encoding Title VI enforcement have been entirely ignored in arriving at this deal. Far from being a legal settlement, the Agreement merely fulfills the Trump administration’s desire to dominate a prominent university, to diminish its autonomy, and to silence critical speech. This Agreement and the many concessions that have preceded it will ineluctably transform Columbia for the worse and stain its reputation in the eyes of the world.
One-off deals that result from coercion are not only antithetical to the rule of law, but also implicate the university in corrupt and authoritarian practices. The illegal rescission of funds, including research grants, community outreach, and all CUIMC training grants has already caused irreparable damage; threatened permanent reductions in budgets that support science research portend even more profound harm. While this Agreement offers some short-term relief to some of those impacted, there is no reason to believe that the deal is a stable one, given the Trump administration’s record on honoring its commitments and the acknowledgment, in the document itself, that perceived breaches of the terms of the deal may result in additional demands and penalties.
The Agreement is, in short, the blunt instrument through which the Trump Administration has demonstrated its power to bludgeon American universities into undermining the traditions of free and open inquiry, robust political speech, and shared governance that have long distinguished them. Despite the university’s leadership’s claims that Columbia has held true to these fundamental principles, it has not.
The Agreement formalizes recent changes to rules governing student/faculty conduct and discipline, and prescribes the acceleration of hearings and punishments (articles 26-27). It authorizes the review and restructuring of departments and areas of study, mandating new hiring in certain fields (12-13). It imposes ideological tests as a precondition for the admission of international students (21-22). It eliminates diversity as a factor in admissions, hiring, and promotion, while also requiring the sharing of all admissions and hiring data “broken down by race, color and national origin” (18-19). Compliance with these and other measures will be ensured by an internal “Administrator” and an external “Resolution Monitor” with broad yet largely undefined powers (11).
We are already inhabiting a changed university.
In this changed university, the Board of Trustees and an Acting President chosen from that Board are making unprecedented concessions to the federal government about matters such as admissions, faculty hiring, and the oversight of departments and curriculum that have historically been exercised by the faculty and university Senate. Consultation with the elected representatives of the faculty has been replaced by ad hoc listening sessions and dean-dominated special committees. The powers of the Senate have been curtailed, and further review of its operations is threatened. Students engaging in political protest, such as those who occupied a reading room in Butler Library in May, face punishments of unprecedented severity. Soothing rhetoric assuring us that we have remained true to our “north star” is, in these circumstances, laughable.
The Columbia AAUP chapter urges every member of the community to read the Agreement carefully and to weigh its implications. For example, we ask our colleagues to consider and call upon the university leadership to explain:
Why, despite no admission of wrongdoing, and no legal finding of guilt, has the university agreed to pay the enormous sum of $200 million to the federal government? Where will the funds for these payments be found? Will they come out of financial aid budgets, or faculty and staff salaries and benefits? And to which individuals or branches of government will this money flow?
● As the Agreement allows for the possibility of new action against the university in the case of perceived non-compliance (6, 39), what ensures that there will not be additional funding cuts in the future? Will funding that has been terminated for projects that do not align with the government’s ideological priorities, e.g., research on climate, vaccines, social justice, or gender, be restored?
● On what basis was the Resolution Monitor selected, and how will the internal Administrator be chosen? What are the powers of each and to whom are they accountable? What is their relationship to the usual bodies of faculty governance?
● The Agreement guarantees single-sex housing for women who request it as well as all-female sports, locker rooms, and showering facilities (20). What protections and opportunities will be offered to non-binary or trans students and colleagues?
● Acting President Shipman’s statement of July 15, 2025, in combination with the Agreement, implement additional measures to combat antisemitism, including the appointment of a student liaison and the adoption of the International Holocaust Remembrance Association’s definition of antisemitism, which qualifies certain criticisms of Zionism and the state of Israel as antisemitic. Under the framework of “zero tolerance” announced by Acting President Shipman, how will it be decided whether texts, syllabi, lectures and published research, in addition to protest actions, cross this line? Will any member of the faculty feel safe teaching or publishing on the history of Palestine, for example? Will off-campus activity, including social media posts and opinion pieces in news outlets, be subject to surveillance under this aspect of the Agreement?
● The Agreement makes no mention of anti-Muslim or anti-Arab bias and discrimination, though a recent survey found that the fear and anguish of Muslim and Arab students is comparable to that of Jewish students. If the goal is to eliminate discrimination and create a safe and welcoming environment for all, why are both the Agreement and Columbia’s public rhetoric silent on this point?
At this inflection point in the history of the university, it is essential that all members of the community—students, faculty, and staff—scrutinize and publicly debate the terms of this so-called settlement and decide together on appropriate forms of action. In the absence of strong and principled leadership from Columbia’s Board of Trustees and Acting President, it falls to the faculty, above all, to defend the values and norms that have defined the university and allowed it to flourish. It is essential at this moment of crisis to support the work of our elected governance bodies such as the university Senate and the Planning and Policy Committee of the Arts and Sciences. Indeed, we urge all schools to establish institutions of self-governance to defend institutional norms and the rights of faculty and students.
The Columbia Chapter of the AAUP is expanding its own response by planning public forums needed to understand the current situation and build consensus on future action. We are also actively reaching out to elected officials to advocate for robust science and basic research budgets, and to enlist support both for Columbia and for all institutions of higher education. And we are creating and expanding coalitions with the many groups on and off-campus that oppose outside interference in Columbia’s institutional practices and wish to defend all members of the community from discrimination, illegal deportation, and the exercise of academic freedom. We invite all members of the Columbia community to join us in this difficult but vital work.