Columbia faculty statement: NEW YORK, NY, October 10, 2011:

Today faculty from Columbia University released a petition signed 
by over 300 professors expressing their support for the Occupy 
Wall Street movement. Signatories to the petition come from across 
the faculty of Columbia University and Barnard College. In their 
petition, the professors join the Occupy Wall Street movement in 
condemning the growth of economic, social, and political 
inequalities. According to the petition, claims that the movement 
lacks focus are inaccurate and ignore the many important issues 
that the Occupy Wall Street movement has raised.

“I understand the message of the Occupy Wall Street movement 
clearly,” said Columbia professor and former University provost, 
Jonathan R. Cole. “The movement speaks to the growing economic 
inequalities in our society: 1 percent of the population holds 
almost 40 percent of the nation’s wealth; as inequality has 
increased taxes on the wealthy have plunged; often wealth rather 
than merit determines who receives educational opportunities; and 
millions of citizens have lost their homes while those on Wall 
Street, who are responsible for much of the economic crisis, are 
rewarded rather than punished.”

Many professors expressed admiration for the movement’s ability to 
refocus public debate to include discussion of equality and 
economic justice. “While my generation of scholars focused on the 
important issues of civil rights and women’s rights, it has been 
said we did not do enough to draw attention to the growth in 
economic inequality. There's just enough truth in this for me to 
be very moved in a personal way that so many people from all walks 
of life, old and young, are uniting now around a platform of basic 
economic fairness,” said Bruce Robbins, the Old Dominion 
Foundation Professor in the Humanities. Professor Hamid Dabashi 
said, “We owe it to the generations of students we have taught to 
oppose the systematic erosion of the common good, of the 
inalienable rights to a decent healthcare, to public education, 
and to a dignified life.”

The professors also believe that the movement provides an 
opportunity to address these issues with students. "As a law 
professor, I feel a particular responsibility in speaking out in 
support of the Occupy Wall Street protests," said Katherine 
Franke, the Isidor and Seville Sulzbacher Professor of Law at 
Columbia Law School. "Lawyers have played no small role in 
providing legal cover for the overreaching and irresponsibility 
undertaken on Wall Street. My hope is that Columbia Law School 
will see these protests as an opportunity to remind our students 
that legal ethics require that lawyers be bound to represent not 
only private, but also larger societal, interests."
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