Rules of University Conduct Committee

Revisions to the Rules of University Conduct and Guidelines to the Rules of University Conduct

The Board of Trustees made extensive changes to the University Statutes in July, August and September 2025. We highlight changes to Chapter XLIV (Rules of University Conduct), the chapter that concerns policy on protest and demonstration, including new procedures for disciplinary proceedings and sanctions. 

We encourage the community to review and familiarize themselves with the updated Rules of University Conduct available at at https://universitypolicies.columbia.edu/content/rules-university-conduct.

Changes to Protest and Demonstration Policies  

  • All demonstration activity is now “subject to the University’s anti-discrimination and anti-harassment policies” (§440, p. 137).
  • All demonstrations and other protest activities “that occur inside academic buildings and places where academic activities take place” are now prohibited (§442, p. 140).
  • Masks “for the purpose of concealing one’s identity while violating a University policy or rule or state, municipal, or local law” are now prohibited and anyone, masked or unmasked, must present a valid ID when asked by a University Delegate OR a Public Safety Officer (§444, pp. 144-5).

 

Changes to Disciplinary Proceedings 

  • The previous two-month time frame for resolving a report of misconduct is now an indefinite time frame, with the qualification that “the University will seek to resolve every report of misconduct as promptly as possible” (§446, p. 148; §448, p. 150).
  • Respondents no longer have the right to request that a hearing be open to the public (§448, p. 153, relevant stipulation was removed in August 2025).
  • Disciplinary proceedings may now be recorded on a respondent’s permanent record even if the respondent has been found not responsible for a Rules violation (§449, p. 156, relevant stipulation was removed in August 2025).
  • Respondents’ rights to request access to University documents or camera footage are now limited, with the Rules Administrator having full discretion to deny requests for access (§446, p. 148).
  • Powers entrusted to Delegates may now be exercised by other University officials, including Public Safety Officers (§443, pp. 142–3).
  • The University Senate’s duty to “promulgate a code of conduct for faculty, students and staff and provide for its enforcement” is amended with the addition that “such code shall not include any of the matters addressed in Article XLIV of the Statutes, any University policy on discrimination or harassment or any policy administered by the Center for Student Success and Intervention (or successor group)” (§23, p. 23).

 

Changes to Sanctions 

  • An addition has been made to the sanction “revocation of degree” that it may be “(limited or indefinite), with any applicable conditions for reinstatement” (§449, p. 159).
  • An addition has been made to the sanction “suspension (limited time or indefinite)” that there may be “any applicable conditions for return” (§449, p. 159). 

 

Guidelines to the Rules of University Conduct

The Guidelines to the Rules of University Conduct were prepared by the Rules of University Conduct Committee to facilitate implementation and application of the Rules and were endorsed by the University Senate in August 2024. 

In July 2025 the Trustees nullified the Guidelines to the Rules of University Conduct and incorporated portions into the revised Rules of University Conduct that they issued at that time. The following elements have not been incorporated:

  • Specifics about permissible time, place and manner of protests
  • The provision that groups may not be sanctioned for the behavior of an individual, and that individuals may not be sanctioned for the behavior of a group unless there is evidence about the individual’s own conduct
  • The discussion of restorative justice
  • The provision that the University Judicial Board shall seek consistency and uniformity in the sanctions it imposes
  • The provision on credentials for student media
  • The provision on written witness statements
  • The provision that "interim sanctions may not impact a respondent's access to their housing, dining or healthcare services unless their alleged conduct involved serious actual or threatened harm to or in such facilities" is not present

     

One final note: while not an amendment to the University Statutes, a clarification was added to Columbia’s University Policies webpage on the Rules of University Conduct that “for the purposes of this policy, the term ‘University’ includes Columbia University only. It does not include affiliate institutions, including Barnard College or Teachers College.”

Rules of University Conduct

The revised Rules of University Conduct can be found at https://universitypolicies.columbia.edu/content/rules-university-conduct.

The previous Rules of University Conduct can be downloaded here.

 

The General Concern form may be used to report violations of the Rules of University Conduct. 

About

The Rules of University Conduct Committee "shall have jurisdiction to review and recommend revision of rules of University conduct, as well as the means of enforcing those rules. In matters pertaining to rules of conduct and tribunals for faculty, the Rules Committee shall consult with the Faculty Affairs Committee, and in matters pertaining to such rules and tribunals for students, it shall consult with the Student Affairs Committee. In matters pertaining to rules of conduct and tribunals for research officers, the Rules Committee shall consult with the Research Officers Committee. The Committee shall, to the extent appropriate, incorporate its proposals in the form of amendments to the University Statutes and shall submit the same to the University Senate as a whole, to become effective upon adoption by the Senate with the concurrence of the Trustees." (University Senate By-Laws Sec.4.k.vii.)

Members

  • Dr. William Hunnicutt is the Associate Director of the Carleton Laboratory in the Department of Civil Engineering and Engineering Mechanics. He completed a Ph.D. in Civil Engineering from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Will oversees research and teaching operations within the Carleton Lab, and conducts research in the area of cementitious materials, with a specific interest in construction materials used in nuclear power plants and their degradation due to radiation, as well as experimental measurement of nano- to millimeter scale mechanical properties.

  • Sen. Susan Bernofsky is Professor of Writing in the Faculty of the Arts, and Director of Literary Translation at Columbia in the School of the Arts Writing Program. On the University Senate, Sen. Bernofsky serves on the Rules of University Conduct Committee. 

    A 2020 Berlin Prize Fellow at the American Academy in Berlin, 2019 fellow at the Dorothy and Lewis B. Cullman Center for Scholars and Writers, and past Guggenheim fellow, Sen. Bernofsky has translated more than twenty books including three novels and four collections of short prose by the great Swiss-German modernist author Robert Walser, as well as Franz Kafka’s The Metamorphosis and Hermann Hesse’s Siddhartha. She is the author, most recently, of Clairvoyant of the Small: The Life of Robert Walser (Yale, 2021), a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award for Biography. Past awards include the Helen and Kurt Wolff Translator’s Prize and the Hermann Hesse Translation Prize. Her translation of Jenny Erpenbeck’s novel The End of Days (2014) won the Independent Foreign Fiction Prize, The Schlegel-Tieck Translation Prize, the Ungar Award for Literary Translation, and the Oxford-Weidenfeld Translation Prize. Her translation of Yoko Tawada’s novel Memoirs of a Polar Bear (2016) won the inaugural Warwick Prize for Women in Translation. In 2019 she received the Modern Language Association’s Lois Roth Award and the Friedrich Ulfers Prize. Her translation of Yoko Tawada’s novel Paul Celan and the Transtibetan Angel is forthcoming in 2023 from New Directions. She is currently working on a new translation of Thomas Mann’s monumental novel The Magic Mountain for W.W. Norton.

  • Sen. Michael B. Gerrard is Andrew Sabin Professor of Professional Practice at Columbia Law School, where he teaches courses on environmental and energy law.  He founded and directs the Sabin Center for Climate Change Law, which now has 16 lawyers and is the leading academic center on climate change law in the world.   He is a former Chair of the Faculty of Columbia’s Earth Institute and now holds a joint appointment to the faculty of its successor, the Columbia Climate School. Before joining the Columbia faculty in 2009, he was partner in charge of the New York office of the Arnold & Porter law firm.  He practiced environmental law in New York City full time from 1979 through 2008. He was the 2004-2005 chair of the American Bar Association’s Section of Environment, Energy and Resources.  He has also chaired the Executive Committee of the New York City Bar Association, and the Environmental Law Section of the New York State Bar Association.  

    Since 1986, Gerrard has written an environmental law column for the New York Law Journal.  He is author or editor of fourteen books, two of which were named Best Law Book of the Year by the Association of American Publishers: Environmental Law Practice Guide (twelve volumes, 1992) and Brownfields Law and Practice (four volumes, 1998). Among his other books are Global Climate Change and U.S. Law (with Jody Freeman and Michael Burger) (3d ed. 2023); Threatened Island Nations: Legal Implications of Rising Seas and a Changing Climate (with Gregory Wannier, 2013); and Legal Pathways to Deep Decarbonization in the United States (with John Dernbach 2019).
     

     

  • Sen. Marc Younker is a 3L representing Columbia Law School. Marc currently Marc co-chairs the University Senate Rules Committee and serves on the Student Affairs Committee. He is from West Orange, New Jersey, and earned his B.A. in Political Science from Rutgers University, graduating magna cum laude. Outside of Columbia, Marc serves on the board of Garden State Equality, New Jersey's largest LBGTQ+ advocacy organization.

  • Sen. Liane Bdair is a student at Columbia College, studying economics and political science on a pre-law track. She serves on the executive board of Turath, the Arab Students Association, where she helps foster community and cultural pride among Arab-identifying students. Additionally, Liane’s Palestinian- American Background makes her deeply committed to equity, inclusion, and student advocacy. As a University Senator, Liane is focused on promoting shared governance, increasing transparency from the administration, and ensuring that student perspectives are meaningfully included in decision-making processes. With a new perspective and a dedication to building bridges between administration and student groups, she is passionate about amplifying voices that are often overlooked in university policy and governance conversations.

  • Sen. Joseph Slaughter specializes in literature, law, and socio-cultural history of the Global South (particularly Latin America and Africa). He’s especially interested in the social work of literature—the myriad ways in which literature intersects (formally, historically, ideologically, materially) with problems of social justice, human rights, intellectual property, and international law.

    His honors include a Guggenheim Fellowship, Public Voices Fellowship, Lenfest Distinguished Faculty Award. His book Human Rights, Inc.: The World Novel, Narrative Form, and International Law (Fordham UP, 2007), which explores the cooperative narrative logics of international human rights law and the Bildungsroman, was awarded the 2008 René Wellek prize for comparative literature and cultural theory. His essay, “Enabling Fictions and Novel Subjects: The Bildungsroman and International Human Rights Law,” was honored as one of the two best articles published in PMLA in 2006-7. He was elected to serve as President of the American Comparative Literature Association in 2016.

    His essays and articles include : “World Literature as Property” in Alif: Journal of Comparative Poetics; “However Incompletely, Human” in The Meanings of Human Rights: Philosophy, Critical Theory, Law; “‘It’s good to be primitive’: African Allusion and the Modernist Fetish of Authenticity” in Modernism and Copyright; “The Enchantment of Human Rights; or, What Difference Does Humanitarian Indifference Make?” in Critical Quarterly; “Vanishing Points: When Narrative Is Not Simply There” in The Journal of Human Rights; “‘A Mouth with Which to Tell the Story’: Silence, Violence, and Speech in the Narrative of Things Fall Apart” in Emerging Perspectives on Chinua Achebe; “Master Plans: Designing (National) Allegories of Urban Space and Metropolitan Subjects for Postcolonial Kenya” in Research in African Literatures; “Introducing Human Rights and Literary Form; Or, the Vehicles and Vocabularies of Human Rights,” co-authored with Sophia A. McClennen, in Comparative Literature Studies; “A Question of Narration: The Voice in International Human Rights Law” in Human Rights Quarterly; “Humanitarian Reading” in Humanitarianism and Suffering: The Mobilization of Empathy through Narrative. Slaughter is a founding co-editor of Humanity: An International Journal of Human Rights, Humanitarianism, and Development.

    He is co-editing a volume of essays, The Global South Atlantic, that explores some of the many social, cultural, political, and material interactions across the oceanic space between Africa and Latin America that have made it historically (im)possible to imagine the South Atlantic as a coherent region. He is currently working on two monographs, “Pathetic Fallacies: Essays on Human Rights, Humanitarianism, and the Humanities” and "New Word Orders: Intellectual Property and World Literature," which considers the role of plagiarism, piracy, and intellectual property regimes in the globalization of the novel, as well the work the novel might do to interrupt globalization and to resist monopoly privatization of cultural and intellectual creations.

  • Jenny Mak is the Senior Associate Dean of Engineering Student Affairs and an Adjunct Professor of Professional Development and Leadership at Columbia Engineering. Dr. Mak provides leadership to the Engineering Student Affairs team, supporting Columbia Engineers and the school’s K-12 outreach efforts. She established Columbia Engineering's Graduate Career Placement (GCP) and Professional Development and Leadership (PDL) units.

    Dr. Mak joined Columbia Engineering in 2003. Prior to joining the Dean's Office, she was the Executive Director of the Industrial Engineering and Operations Research Department at Columbia Engineering. Previously she was a Senior Consultant for Deloitte Consulting and a Technology Consultant for D. E. Shaw & Co.

    Dr. Mak is a proud four-time graduate of Columbia University: Doctor of Education, Master of Arts, Master of International Affairs, and Bachelor of Science. She earned her B.S. in Industrial Engineering from Columbia Engineering. Her research interests include the intellectual and ethical development of college students, adult learning, and leadership.

  • Sen. Janie Weiss is IT Manager of the Irving Comprehensive Cancer Center, a role she has held for over 30 years. She assists faculty, staff, and students with their IT needs, helping to advance the research enterprise. On the University Senate, Janie serves on the Rules Committee, Structure and Operations Committee, Commission on the Status of Women, and Commission on Benefits.

     

  • Sen. Elizabeth Adeoye (she/her) is a Columbia College student majoring in political science, with a minor in sociology and a special concentration in business management. She previously served on the Columbia College Student Council as Pre-professional Representative and currently sits on the boards of several cultural and pre-professional organizations, including the African Students Association. She is also a Resident Adviser, supporting undergraduate students throughout their time in University housing. Coming from a Nigerian-American background, Elizabeth advocates for increased support and resources for FLI students, international students, and students of color. She also dances on two teams, Raw Elementz and the Columbia University Dance Team, remaining active in Columbia’s cultural life.
     

    As a University Senator, Elizabeth plans to push for clearer communication between students and administration, more equitable resource distribution, and stronger representation for underrepresented communities in university policy. She brings to the role a strong track record of leadership, cross-campus collaboration, and a deep investment in equity and inclusion at Columbia.

  • Sen. Eli Baum is a senior from Brooklyn, NY. He studies math and English at Columbia College. Currently, he is an editor at The Blue and White Magazine, where he has written and edited articles about campus and local politics. In his free time he likes to play board games and read.

  • David Pozen teaches and writes about constitutional law, information law, and nonprofit law, among other topics. 

    In 2019, the American Law Institute named Pozen the recipient of its Early Career Scholars Medal, which is awarded every other year to “one or two outstanding early-career law professors whose work is relevant to public policy and has the potential to influence improvements in the law.” Justice Mariano-Florentino Cuéllar of the California Supreme Court, the selection committee chair, described Pozen’s writings on government secrecy and constitutional theory as “remarkable” and “widely influential,” “as timely as they are learned and as creative and thought-provoking as they are nuanced and precise.”

    Pozen’s body of work includes dozens of articles, essays, and book chapters. He has also edited two volumes for Columbia University Press, on transparency (2018) and free speech (2020), and been a semi-regular contributor to the Balkinization and Lawfare blogs. He has been the keynote speaker at numerous academic conferences, in the United States and abroad, and his scholarship has been discussed in outlets including The New York TimesThe New YorkerThe Washington PostHarper’sPoliticoAmerican Scholar, and NPR.

    In 2017, Pozen became the inaugural visiting scholar at the Knight First Amendment Institute at Columbia University. In 2013, the student-run Columbia Society of International Law recognized Pozen with its Faculty Honors Award.

    From 2010 to 2012, Pozen served as special adviser to Harold Hongju Koh, legal adviser at the U.S. Department of State. Previously, Pozen was a law clerk for Justice John Paul Stevens on the U.S. Supreme Court and for Judge Merrick B. Garland on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit and was a special assistant to Sen. Edward M. Kennedy on the Senate Judiciary Committee.

  • Sen. Carlos Alonso is Dean of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences and Morris A. and Alma Schapiro Professor in the Humanities in the Department of Latin American and Iberian Cultures. Prior to serving as dean, he was Chair of the Department of Latin American and Iberian Cultures and Director of Undergraduate Studies for the Institute for Comparative Literature and Society. On the University Senate, Dean Alonso serves on the Committee on the Rules of University Conduct, and has served on the Commission on Diversity and the Honors and Prizes Committee. 

    Dean Alonso received his B.A. from Cornell in Spanish and Latin American Literature and completed his M.A. and Ph.D. in Latin American literature at Yale. He is the author of Modernity and Autochthony: The Spanish American Regional Novel, and The Burden of Modernity: The Rhetoric of Cultural Discourse in Spanish America, and editor of Julio Cortázar: New Readings. He was the editor of PMLA and edited the Hispanic Review. While at Penn, Dean Alonso received the Lindback Award for Distinguished Teaching, the university's highest award for pedagogical excellence.

    Dean Alonso specializes in 19th and 20th-century Latin American intellectual history and cultural production and in contemporary literary and cultural theory. He has taught the graduate seminar on Literary and Cultural Theory and the course Theories of Culture in Latin America. Under his editorship, the department's Revista Hispánica Moderna received the 2009 Council of Editors of Learned Journals Phoenix Award for Significant Editorial Achievement.

  • Sen. Adam Cannon is Teaching Professor of Computer Science in the Department of Computer Science. Dr. Cannon joined Columbia in July, 2000. From 2000 to 2005 he was also a visiting scientist at Los Alamos National Laboratory. Dr. Cannon came to Columbia after earning a Ph.D. in applied mathematics from Johns Hopkins University. He holds B.S. and M.S. degrees in aerospace engineering from the University of California, Los Angeles. Dr. Cannon’s current research interests are in computer science education, machine learning, and statistical pattern recognition. He is a winner of the Presidential Award for Outstanding Teaching, The Society of Columbia Graduates Great Teacher Award, and the School of Engineering and Applied Science Alumni Association’s Distinguished Faculty Teaching Award.

     

Profiles, showing -

    Committee Calendar 2025-2026

    Rules of University Conduct: Friday at 12:00 p.m., 407 Low Library 

    1. September 19, 2025
    2. October 10, 2025
    3. November 7, 2025
    4. December 5, 2025
    5. January 23, 2026
    6. February 13, 2026
    7. March 27, 2026
    8. April 17, 2026

    **Dates and/or time may be subject to change