Beaver
Issue 842 | 1.12.15
the
Newspaper of the LSE Students’ Union
LSE Divests From Coal & Tar Sands, Tobacco and Arms Joseph Briers News Deputy Editor
The Beaver Pride Week Special
What Makes You
PROUD?
THE LSE COUNCIL HAS consented to amendments proposed by the LSE DivestCampaign, made up of students and staff, to its Socially Responsible Investment Policy that look to significantly limit the impact of the School’s investments on climate change, in what will be seen as a serious victory for environmental campaigners on campus. As part of the overhaul, the university has agreed to divest its investments in companies whose business is significantly focused on thermal coal or tar sands – two notoriously polluting energy sources, and halt future investment in fossil fuels. A school spokesperson said: ‘this announcement represents a positive commitment from LSE to sup-
port the transition to the low-carbon economy. We are proud of our rigorous and innovative academic contributions on climate change and the environment, and also of our own high environmental standards on campus, and it is right that our updated investment policy better reflects this work’. Long standing pressure on the School to divest has reached something of a crescendo in recent weeks as campaigners staged a ‘day of action’ during Green Week amidst the backdrop of the upcoming COP21 talks in Paris. The reconsideration of investment strategy marks perhaps the greatest success in the history of the pressure group ‘LSE Divest’ since its establishment three years ago. Members of the group campaigned right up to the
last minute of the Council’s decision, even greeting Councilors with banners and ‘divestment brownies’ on their way into the crucial meeting. SU Environment and Ethics Officer Elena Bignami insists there is still much work to be done. She told The Beaver, ‘the School’s commitment to reduce its investments from coal and tar sands represents a first step in the right direction… and is an important political statement leading up to the Paris climate talks. Partial divestment, however, is not enough. Oil and gas need to be progressively integrated in the SRI report and phased-out from all LSE investments’. ‘The Fossil Free fight is not over yet!’ Bignami warns. Continued Page 4
Comment: How Enlightened Is London To LGBT+ Issues? Manu Anzola Postgraduate Student
BEING GAY SEEMS TO BE such a non-issue in London nowadays. In my mind, acceptance of gay marriage is a clear sign of how progressive a society is and here it has been legal for a few years now. I feel good and reassured that the world has changed when I see gay couples walking hand in hand down the streets or being affectionate at restaurants. Yet I can’t help but wonder how gays fare in rural areas, which leads me to the conclusion that this
Features The City
phenomenon is still confined to large cosmopolitan urban centres. Save for the rugby controversy last year that I heard about, the whole of the LSE seems to have embraced that gay is good, which makes me feel welcome. I was also delighted to find out that practically all of the companies at the Consultancy Fair back in October realize just how fabulous we are and even the business world seems to be embracing equality, and being out and proud. In London it is fairly easy to imagine having a nor-
Gay Pride is about LGBT+ Discrimination resisting disempowerment in employment Page 28 Page 25
mal life going out to nice dinners with my tall, handsome, banker boyfriend (whom I met at the LSE of course) his tailored suit and suave haircut both on point and be perfectly unbothered… but I digress. I did not expect anything less when coming to London, and I chose to study here specifically because of its reputation for embracing diversity. But not all that glitters is gold. No matter how progressive and open life in London may be... Continued Page 8