Skip to content
ADVERTISEMENT
Sign In
  • Sections
    • News
    • Advice
    • The Review
  • Topics
    • Data
    • Diversity, Equity, & Inclusion
    • Finance & Operations
    • International
    • Leadership & Governance
    • Teaching & Learning
    • Scholarship & Research
    • Student Success
    • Technology
    • Transitions
    • The Workplace
  • Magazine
    • Current Issue
    • Special Issues
    • Podcast: College Matters from The Chronicle
  • Newsletters
  • Virtual Events
  • Ask Chron
  • Store
    • Featured Products
    • Reports
    • Data
    • Collections
    • Back Issues
  • Jobs
    • Find a Job
    • Post a Job
    • Professional Development
    • Career Resources
    • Virtual Career Fair
  • More
  • Sections
    • News
    • Advice
    • The Review
  • Topics
    • Data
    • Diversity, Equity, & Inclusion
    • Finance & Operations
    • International
    • Leadership & Governance
    • Teaching & Learning
    • Scholarship & Research
    • Student Success
    • Technology
    • Transitions
    • The Workplace
  • Magazine
    • Current Issue
    • Special Issues
    • Podcast: College Matters from The Chronicle
  • Newsletters
  • Virtual Events
  • Ask Chron
  • Store
    • Featured Products
    • Reports
    • Data
    • Collections
    • Back Issues
  • Jobs
    • Find a Job
    • Post a Job
    • Professional Development
    • Career Resources
    • Virtual Career Fair
    Upcoming Events:
    An AI-Driven Work Force
    AI and Microcredentials
Sign In
Procedural Morass

Pro-Palestinian Protesters Stuck in Disciplinary and Legal Limbo

By Katherine Mangan July 5, 2024
A pro-Palestinian demonstrator wears goggles and a mask as police with riot shields and protesters stand across from one another on the grounds of the University of Virginia, in Charlottesville, Va., where tents are set up, Saturday, May 4, 2024.
Pro-Palestinian protesters face off with the police at the U. of Virginia in early May.Cal Cary, The Daily Progress, AP

Two weeks before she was to graduate from the University of Virginia, Cady de la Cruz said she found herself being dragged across the ground by the police, marched off the campus with her arms zip-tied behind her back, and banned from re-entering.

Ten members of the first-generation student’s extended family were making plans to join her to celebrate her years of hard work. Her graduation, though, was now on the line because of her refusal to leave a pro-Palestinian rally that the university said had

To continue reading for FREE, please sign in.

Sign In

Or subscribe now to read with unlimited access for as low as $10/month.

Don’t have an account? Sign up now.

A free account provides you access to a limited number of free articles each month, plus newsletters, job postings, salary data, and exclusive store discounts.

Sign Up

Two weeks before she was to graduate from the University of Virginia, Cady de la Cruz said she found herself being dragged across the ground by the police, marched off the campus with her arms zip-tied behind her back, and banned from re-entering.

Ten members of the first-generation student’s extended family were making plans to join her to celebrate her years of hard work. Her graduation, though, was now on the line because of her refusal to leave a pro-Palestinian rally that the university said had become dangerous and unruly when people unaffiliated with the university showed up and some protesters started acting aggressively.

The university gave students a chance to sidestep the disciplinary process if they’d agree to come in and talk to administrators, she said. The students responded that they would go in only as a group.

“This is something UVA inflicted on us collectively and we don’t want to be isolated,” de la Cruz said. “Singling students out,” she said, seemed to be a way for the university “to get either an apology or an admission of guilt, and we weren’t interested in giving them either of those.”

A university press officer did not respond to requests for comment.

Scenes like this are taking place across the country as colleges are confronted this summer with hundreds of emotionally fraught disciplinary cases stemming from pro-Palestinian protests and encampments.

Administrators are trying to demonstrate that their rules matter and that students who break them will be held accountable, but also to make clear that students have a right to express ideas, no matter how polarizing. Looking ahead to the fall, they want to ensure that their campuses will be safe and that students will be able to focus on their studies without disruptive protests that some Jewish students have described as threatening.

How Gaza Encampments Upended Higher Ed

Pro-Palestinian protesters at the University of Southern California in Los Angeles link arms as police stand guard during a demonstration on Wednesday, April 24, 2024. A wave of pro-Palestinian protests spread and intensified on Wednesday as students gathered on campuses around the country, in some cases facing off with the police, in a widening showdown over campus speech and the war in Gaza.

Read the latest news stories and opinion pieces, and track sit-ins on campuses across the country on our interactive map.

Clashes could turn ugly this fall, with the potential convergence of protests over both the U.S. election and the war in Gaza, where the death toll continues to mount.

Would harsh penalties for the spring protests deter students from defying those warnings again? Or would anger over the disciplinary process make students even more defiant?

ADVERTISEMENT

Here are five ways pending disciplinary hearings could continue to stress colleges throughout the summer and into next fall.

The timing of the most disruptive protests has resulted in degrees being withheld, with hearings dragging into the summer.

Many of the protests erupted a few weeks before graduation, meaning that, like de la Cruz, some students would be graduating before their disciplinary cases had wrapped up. Cases will stretch out, at least over the summer, and probably into the fall, long after graduating seniors have attempted to move on to jobs and graduate study. That could be complicated without a résumé that specifies when, and even if, a degree was conferred.

Youssef Hasweh received an email shortly before his graduation from the University of Chicago stating that his degree would be withheld because of his involvement with an encampment on that campus in May. He is one of four seniors whose degrees are being held up while the university decides how to discipline them for violating the university’s code of conduct.

ADVERTISEMENT

Local authorities dropped a trespassing charge against him, he said, but the university is moving ahead with its own disciplinary process. “It’s huge because all of us are unemployed. Having a degree is hugely important,” he said.

Hasweh, a Brooklyn, N.Y., native whose parents are Muslim and Moroccan, said during an interview last month that he hadn’t broken the news to his mother yet. “I can only imagine how heartbroken my mom would feel right now. She and our family have sacrificed so much to get to this point.”

Still, he said, he’d do it again, even if it meant never getting a degree. He had already been reprimanded by the university for participating in another protest against the war back in November, when students staged a sit-in at the admissions office and refused to leave.

“I have no regrets,” Hasweh said. “There are people in Gaza who will never walk on a stage or get a degree. I have family in Palestine, and I would do this 10 times over for everyone there.”

ADVERTISEMENT

Thirteen Harvard University students also had their degrees withheld because of their protest activity in May, a decision by the university’s governing board that prompted hundreds of students to walk out of a commencement speech in protest.

Some colleges will be overwhelmed by the high stakes and sheer number of cases.

On June 17, The New York Times reported that more than 3,100 people had been arrested or detained on dozens of college campuses since April 18, including 217 at Columbia University and 271 at the University of California at Los Angeles. In many cases — including at Columbia, the City College of New York, and the University of Texas at Austin — local prosecutors have either dropped charges against protesters or agreed to do so if students don’t commit any crimes over the next six months. But that hasn’t stopped campuses from going ahead with their own student-conduct charges.

Caseloads on some campuses are likely to stress small offices that handle student-disciplinary matters, some of which already have backups. Hearings typically take place over several days, during which evidence is presented against the student, who’s given an opportunity to respond. Resolving the cases can take months, leaving students in limbo for a year or more beyond the alleged infraction.

ADVERTISEMENT

It’s unclear how many of the more than 200 people arrested at UCLA during a police sweep of an encampment in May have been summoned for disciplinary hearings. More than 40 members of the history department signed a statement last month saying that everyone arrested was being called in and urging amnesty for the protesters. They said that the students, some of whom were injured by counterprotesters during a melee that broke out, “need support, not discipline or policing.”

The stakes for students can be high. Those found to have violated campus rules can be suspended or expelled, and they might be prevented from living in college residence halls, studying abroad, or landing campus fellowships. But even lesser punishments can leave black marks on students’ academic records that can show up if they try to transfer to another college or apply to graduate school. An international student who is expelled or suspended could lose their visa status and risk being deported.

Jack Petocz and two other students are being expelled by Vanderbilt University for occupying the chancellor’s office for 21 hours in March. Petocz, a freshman at the time, is appealing his case. He was among a group of students who forced their way into the building. He was also accused of shoving a campus safety officer, which he denies. In an April post on TikTok, Petocz said he was being “expelled for simply fighting the ongoing genocide in Gaza that has killed more than 33,000 people.” He has appealed the punishment, which he said was levied “for having the gall to say the university shouldn’t be profiting off mass slaughter.” He added, “We cannot let Vanderbilt quietly expel passionate activists.”

Vanderbilt officials declined to discuss his specific case, but in a statement in April, the university’s provost, C. Cybele Raver, wrote that “student choices and decisions can lead to serious and costly consequences.”

ADVERTISEMENT

Campus-disciplinary hearings could hurt students in pending criminal cases.

For students who face both criminal and campus-disciplinary charges, the timing of how those cases play out could be important. Some students have resisted participating in campus-disciplinary hearings where they might be expected to admit culpability, worried that a local prosecutor could subpoena that statement.

In most instances, the statements made to a university in a conduct hearing could be used against a student in a criminal case.

Those fears of self-incrimination may be justified, according to Kristi Patrickus, a co-chair for the Association for Student Conduct Administration’s public-policy and legislative-issues committee.

“In most instances, the statements made to a university in a conduct hearing could be used against a student in a criminal case,” she said. The Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act generally protects a student’s educational records, including conduct records, from unauthorized disclosures, she said. “However, a Ferpa exception allows disclosure without a student’s permission in order to ‘comply with a judicial order or lawfully issued subpoena.’”

ADVERTISEMENT

Students who are awaiting disciplinary hearings at the University of Texas at Austin complained they were being asked to answer questions that could incriminate them.

Among those questions, according to the Austin American-Statesman, was whether “it is appropriate” to create encampments and break university policies and whether they would agree that their actions were disruptive. That, some said, would essentially be an admission of guilt, which could hurt them in pending criminal charges. Those fears were partially alleviated last month when prosecutors dropped charges against 79 UT students. Still, because of the pending campus-disciplinary hearings, some students have reported being unable to access transcripts or register for classes. A university spokesman said holds are typically placed on student transcripts and degrees when disciplinary cases are pending. KUT News reported on Friday that students arrested during the protests will receive various forms of suspension.

Colleges will continue to find themselves under an intense spotlight.

Arrests and suspensions of student demonstrators have captured the attention of national reporters, politicians, faculty members, and free-speech advocates. That’s put pressure on colleges to either drop charges against students or speed up the disciplinary process so they aren’t left hanging over the summer. Others want colleges to crack down on the protesters and set a precedent for protests that could break out in the fall.

ADVERTISEMENT

Faculty members and graduate students at the University of California at Irvine called on the administration to drop interim suspensions against students arrested during a May pro-Palestinian encampment. The Academic Senate had also urged an investigation into the administration’s decision to call in dozens of police officers, who arrested 47 students when they refused to end a protest that escalated into the takeover of a lecture hall.

Students who receive interim suspensions can be banned from going to class, living in university housing, or participating in other campus activities. A campus spokesman said many of the students who’d been suspended later had those penalties eased or lifted.

Still, university officials have stood by their tough approach. The chancellor, Howard Gillman, and provost, Hal Stern, wrote a letter to the campus this month that reiterated their strong disapproval over the protesters’ tactics, which they said included “efforts to silence or marginalize voices on their campus that disagreed with the protesters’ views.” Red paint was splattered on the doors of Israeli faculty members, the officials wrote, and “wanted” posters targeted a Jewish faculty member.

Pressure is also coming from the federal government. The U.S. Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights has been acting on dozens of complaints against campuses accused of doing too little to combat antisemitism, Islamophobia, and other acts of discrimination based on shared ancestry. Many of the complaints have centered on recent protests surrounding the war in Gaza.

ADVERTISEMENT

In a resolution agreement with several campuses of the City University of New York, for instance, the office required the system to reopen complaints of discrimination against both Jewish and Palestinian or Muslim students, provide training for public-safety officers, and administer climate surveys.

But with all the pressure to punish student protesters, some argue colleges are trampling on students’ rights. “Amid federal investigations, congressional scrutiny, international media coverage, and pressure from donors, college administrators are feeling the heat to punish student protesters,” the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression said in a statement in May.

“In the middle of a crisis, it is all too easy for college administrators to throw due process out the window and punish students accused of misconduct — whether that misconduct is forming encampments, occupying buildings, or committing other violations of law and university policy.”

Students who hold firm convictions about the causes they’re protesting will resist punishments that call for apologies or admissions of guilt.

ADVERTISEMENT

Some colleges have tried to come up with restorative measures aimed at educating rather than punishing students who violate their rules.

But what does that mean in the context of a war where students have deep-seated convictions that taking over buildings and refusing to leave encampments was the moral thing to do? New York University raised some eyebrows by requiring students to complete 49 pages of readings and tasks aimed at helping improve their “moral reasoning and ethical decision making.” They also had to write a paper that answered questions about whether their actions aligned with their personal values, but they were explicitly told not to “justify” their actions. To some, that amounted to a coerced confession.

An NYU spokesman, John Beckman, said the point of the writing assignment “is not to get students to disavow or change their values; it is to ask the students to consider the impact of their behavior even as they champion their views.” A university spokesman agreed in a statement that the prompt could be improved and said the exercise since been modified.

Complicating matters for colleges, many of the accused students have refused to engage with administrators trying to resolve cases before they go to hearings or in the proceedings themselves.

ADVERTISEMENT

Last month a group called Students for Justice in Palestine at Rutgers University at New Brunswick released a statement saying its members would refuse to participate in any forthcoming disciplinary hearings.

In May, pro-Palestinian protesters voluntarily packed up an encampment in the heart of the campus four days after they’d set it up after administrators agreed to meet some, but not all of their demands. The administration had brought in law enforcement and threatened to clear them out by force if they didn’t negotiate. The encampment ended with no arrests, no violence, but still plenty of controversy, with Rep. Virginia Foxx, the North Carolina Republican who chairs the U.S. House Committee on Education and the Workforce, declaring that the university’s president had “surrendered to antisemitic radicals.”

Protesters, meanwhile, complained that hearings would stress and distract students and attempt to punish them for practicing their First Amendment rights.

“We recognize that these so-called disciplinary meetings are performative, designed not to hear our position but to hasten our punishment and strategically delay our efforts to speak out against the ethnic cleansing of our people,” their statement read. The hearings, they wrote, would only extract more information from students, adding to the stress and trauma that have caused some to drop out of college or fail classes.

A Rutgers spokesperson said student-conduct cases are fair to all students and “can proceed regardless of whether students or organizations choose to participate in the process.”

Read other items in How Gaza Encampments Upended Higher Ed.
We welcome your thoughts and questions about this article. Please email the editors or submit a letter for publication.
Update (July 5, 2024, 4:35 p.m.): This article was updated with news of student suspensions at the University of Texas at Austin.
Tags
Free Speech Political Influence & Activism Campus Safety
Share
  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn
  • Facebook
  • Email
mangan-katie.jpg
About the Author
Katherine Mangan
Katherine Mangan writes about community colleges, completion efforts, student success, and job training, as well as free speech and other topics in daily news. Follow her @KatherineMangan, or email her at katherine.mangan@chronicle.com.
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT

More News

Photo illustration showing Santa Ono seated, places small in the corner of a dark space
'Unrelentingly Sad'
Santa Ono Wanted a Presidency. He Became a Pariah.
Illustration of a rushing crowd carrying HSI letters
Seeking precedent
Funding for Hispanic-Serving Institutions Is Discriminatory and Unconstitutional, Lawsuit Argues
Photo-based illustration of scissors cutting through paper that is a photo of an idyllic liberal arts college campus on one side and money on the other
Finance
Small Colleges Are Banding Together Against a Higher Endowment Tax. This Is Why.
Pano Kanelos, founding president of the U. of Austin.
Q&A
One Year In, What Has ‘the Anti-Harvard’ University Accomplished?

From The Review

Photo- and type-based illustration depicting the acronym AAUP with the second A as the arrow of a compass and facing not north but southeast.
The Review | Essay
The Unraveling of the AAUP
By Matthew W. Finkin
Photo-based illustration of the Capitol building dome propped on a stick attached to a string, like a trap.
The Review | Opinion
Colleges Can’t Trust the Federal Government. What Now?
By Brian Rosenberg
Illustration of an unequal sign in black on a white background
The Review | Essay
What Is Replacing DEI? Racism.
By Richard Amesbury

Upcoming Events

Plain_Acuity_DurableSkills_VF.png
Why Employers Value ‘Durable’ Skills
Warwick_Leadership_Javi.png
University Transformation: a Global Leadership Perspective
  • Explore Content
    • Latest News
    • Newsletters
    • Letters
    • Free Reports and Guides
    • Professional Development
    • Virtual Events
    • Chronicle Store
    • Chronicle Intelligence
    • Jobs in Higher Education
    • Post a Job
  • Know The Chronicle
    • About Us
    • Vision, Mission, Values
    • DEI at The Chronicle
    • Write for Us
    • Work at The Chronicle
    • Our Reporting Process
    • Advertise With Us
    • Brand Studio
    • Accessibility Statement
  • Account and Access
    • Manage Your Account
    • Manage Newsletters
    • Individual Subscriptions
    • Group and Institutional Access
    • Subscription & Account FAQ
  • Get Support
    • Contact Us
    • Reprints & Permissions
    • User Agreement
    • Terms and Conditions
    • Privacy Policy
    • California Privacy Policy
    • Do Not Sell My Personal Information
1255 23rd Street, N.W. Washington, D.C. 20037
© 2025 The Chronicle of Higher Education
The Chronicle of Higher Education is academe’s most trusted resource for independent journalism, career development, and forward-looking intelligence. Our readers lead, teach, learn, and innovate with insights from The Chronicle.
Follow Us
  • twitter
  • instagram
  • youtube
  • facebook
  • linkedin