Harvard Undergraduate Council

Harvard Undergraduate Council
Established 1982
Type Student Union, 501c3
Website uc.fas.harvard.edu

The Harvard Undergraduate Council, colloquially known as "the UC", is the representative student government of Harvard College. The Council was established in 1982 by a vote of the Harvard Faculty of Arts and Sciences and student referendum. The current President and Vice President of the Undergraduate Council are Senan Ebrahim and Bonnie Cao, respectively.

Contents

History

In 1980, the then-dean of Harvard College John B. Fox initiated a committee that was to be called the Committee to Review College Governance, chaired by John Dowling, who was a professor of biology at the College. This committee was tasked with the duty of determining the strengths and the weaknesses of the present system of governance at the College and of considering any needed reforms that might improve the quality of college life at Harvard.[1]

This committee's deliberations eventually led to passage of legislation from the faculty, a bill which created the Harvard-Radcliffe Undergraduate Council in 1982. The constitution of the Council was ratified by a student body referendum in the same year. The first Council had roughly 80 members, and these members would elect a chair and a vice-chair to oversee the Council. The Undergraduate Council funded undergraduate organizations with the proceeds of a opt-out fee collected from the tuition bill of each registered student, planned social events and services, and sent representatives to student-faculty committees. The Council today still carries out these duties and largely gets its revenue from the same original source of student tuition.

In 1995, the Undergraduate Council passed a number of internal reforms, the most notable of which was the creation of the roles President and Vice President, more closely modelling an actual government. In 2002, in a symbolic gesture to honor the advancement of gender relations on campus since the integration of Harvard and Radcliffe Colleges, the Council voted to strike "Radcliffe" from its name to simply become the "Harvard Undergraduate Council".[2] Today, the Council still has the roles of President and Vice President; in addition, there are Chairs and Vice Chairs of the expanded sub-committees, in which most of the work of the Council is done: the Education Committee, the Finance Committee, the Student Initiatives Committee, the Student Life Committee, the Student Relations Committee, the Rules Committee, the Freshman Class Committee, and the Social Programs Task Force.

Operations

Founded with the purpose of representing undergraduates at Harvard to the administration, faculty, and wider community, the Undergraduate Council is chiefly responsible for advocacy on behalf of students and funding student activities on campus. The Council operates with a budget that is primarily dispensed to student organizations, but also it funds social events and student initiatives. Most of the UC's funding comes from the composite of opt-out fees collected from the tuition bill of each registered student.

Since administrators at the College typically see the Undergraduate Council as the representative of the student body, these administrators often consult with the Council for nearly all student issues. In recent years, student-faculty committees have flourished with the joint cooperation of the administration and the Undergraduate Council. The Undergraduate Council fields applications from the student body for places in these committees and makes its decisions based on relevant experiences and perceived passion for respective roles. Chairs and vice chairs of certain UC committees sometimes sit on the relevant student-faculty committees to engage with faculty, administrators, and other students. Current student-faculty committees and committees with student representatives include:

Education

Student Life and Student Advisement

Other

All of these committees meet during the school term only.[3]

References

  1. ^ http://oasis.lib.harvard.edu/oasis/deliver/~hua04000
  2. ^ http://www.thecrimson.com/article/2002/4/2/council-removes-radcliffe-from-title-the/
  3. ^ http://uc.fas.harvard.edu/index.php/business/committees/fas-committees/

External links