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No. 883 Friday 30th October 2020 varsity.co.uk
Cambridge’s Independent Student Newspaper since 1947
Covid-19 Watch
105
positive symptomatic cases
38
positive asymptomatic cases
4.6
k
total number of students screened
Petition demands Jesus College fully divests by 2021 Diana Stoyanova Deputy News Editor
supervisor who had been making the sexually inappropriate comments, but “she promised me he’d been disciplined and dealt with and really discouraged me from making the complaint against him.” In light of these responses, Mary decided against making the complaint. Varsity can confirm, however, that this supervisor subsequently received a considerable promotion within the College and faculty. Furthermore, as Mary told Varsity: “he’s now my lecturer for 2 papers this year, one of which is compulsory.” When Mary brought her complaint
A petition launched by the Jesus College Climate Justice Campaign (JCCJC) on 12 October has now acquired 327 signatures from students, academics and alumni. The petition has three main demands. Firstly, it demands that the College fully divest from all indirect investments in fossil fuels by 2021. Secondly, it demands the full divestment “from all investments in companies involved in biodiversity destruction, intensive animal farming and other ecocidal industries by the end of 2021.” Finally, it calls on the college to commit to achieving Net Zero Emissions by 2030 at the latest. The petition was launched on the same day that the campaign staged a demonstration which included a die-in and other displays such as protestors wearing fake blood and holding up signs. The petition claims that, as “a wealthy Cambridge college at the centre of worldleading sustainability research”, Jesus’ deadline for Net Zero Emissions should be more ambitious than the UN’s deadline of 2050. It also claims that “given that the Jesus College investment portfolio is significantly smaller than the central University’s, we believe it is reasonable to expect that the College should divest by the end of 2021” rather than 2030, which is the University’s deadline for full divestment. In the context of Christ’s College recently announcing that it will also fully divest by 2030, the JCCJC’s petition urges Jesus College to “be bolder.” The petition argues that, since studies show that “sustainable, ethical invest-
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A Case Study of Failure Varsity investigates Homerton’s welfare crisis Wiliam Hunter Deputy News Editor Content note: detailed discussion of mental health issues, suicide, sexual abuse, PTSD and assault. All names of students have been changed to preserve anonymity. On October 12th, Homerton for Consent published an open letter publicly criticising the “mistrust and mishandling of sexual misconduct and disciplinary complaints” at Homerton College. The open letter, which now has over 100 signatures, stated that “many survivors are currently being ignored by senior staff members when contacting them about sexual misconduct issues
including urgent/immediate safety concerns”. The letter also put pressure on the College to make reporting procedures more transparent and widely known. This is not the first time, however, that students at Homerton have attempted to draw attention to the mishandling of sexual misconduct complaints and the welfare of female students. In March, Homerton for Consent hosted a joint art event with the students of Trinity College which aimed to raise awareness of the failings of sexual harassment policy across the University and in the College. Posters calling to ‘Make College Safe for Women’ were anonymously posted around Homerton, all of which were swiftly removed.
As the pressure on the College to reform its welfare policies mounts, Varsity has been speaking to students at Homerton, offering them the chance to share their stories of mishandling and neglect. Mary reported that in 2019, while attending a College dinner, her supervisor and another male student were engaged in a “graphically sexual conversation” about her and other female students. Fortunately for Mary, another student had overheard and taken down the contents of the conversation so she was informed and able to make a complaint. Mary arranged to have a meeting with the Senior Tutor where she asked about pursuing a formal complaint against the
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