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Disinvestment

Disinvestment refers to the use of a concerted economic boycott to pressure a government, industry, or company towards a change in policy, or in the case of governments, even regime change. The term was first used in the 1980s, most commonly in the United States, to refer to the use of a concerted economic boycott designed to pressure the government of South Africa into abolishing its policy of apartheid. The term has also been applied to actions targeting Iran, Sudan, Northern Ireland, Myanmar, Israel, and China.

Examples edit

Industries edit

Environment edit

There is a movement to disinvest from coal, oil and gas companies. It is a social movement which urges everyone from individual investors to large endowed institutions to remove their investments (to divest) from publicly listed oil, gas and coal companies, with the intention of combating climate change by reducing the amount of greenhouse gases released into the atmosphere, and holding the oil, gas and coal companies responsible for their role in climate change.

Founder of the movement Bill McKibben, a researcher and academic from University of Victoria, and creator of the webpage 350.org stated: “If it is wrong to wreck the climate, then it is wrong to profit from the wreckage. We believe […] organizations that serve the public good should divest from fossil fuels”

Companies edit

  • Talisman Energy - because of its status as the main Western oil company in Sudan in the early 2000s.

Nations edit

Iran edit

Eighteen American states have passed laws requiring the divestment of state pension funds from firms doing business with Iran.[10]

South Africa edit

The most frequently-encountered method of "dis-investing" was to persuade state, county and municipal governments to sell their stock in companies which had a presence in South Africa, such shares having been previously placed in the portfolio of the state's, county's or city's pension fund. Several states and localities did pass legislation ordering the sale of such securities, most notably the city of San Francisco. An array of celebrities, including singer Paul Simon, actively supported the cause.

Many conservatives opposed the disinvestment campaign, accusing its advocates of hypocrisy for not also proposing that the same sanctions be leveled on either the Soviet Union or the People's Republic of China. Ronald Reagan, who was the President of the United States during the time the disinvestment movement was at its peak, also opposed it, instead favoring a policy of "constructive engagement" with the Pretoria regime. Some offered as an alternative to disinvestment the so-called "Sullivan Principles", named after Reverend Leon Sullivan, an African-American clergyman who served on the Board of Directors of General Motors. These principles called for corporations doing business in South Africa to adhere to strict standards of non-discrimination in hiring and promotions, so as to set a positive example.

Northern Ireland edit

There was also a less well-publicized movement to apply the strategy of disinvestment to Northern Ireland, as some prominent Irish-American politicians sought to have state and local governments sell their stock in companies doing business in that part of the United Kingdom. This movement featured its own counterpart to the Sullivan Principles; known as the "MacBride Principles" (named for Nobel Peace Prize winner Seán MacBride), which called for American and other foreign companies to take the initiative in nondiscrimination against Roman Catholics by adopting policies resembling affirmative action. The effort to disinvest in Northern Ireland met with little success, but the United States Congress did pass (and then-President Bill Clinton signed) a law requiring American companies with interests there to implement most of the MacBride Principles in 1998.[citation needed]

Cuba edit

Though in place long before the term "disinvestment" was coined, the United States embargo against Cuba meets many of the criteria for designation as such — and a provision more closely paralleling the disinvestment strategy aimed at South Africa was added in 1996, when the United States Congress passed the Helms-Burton Act, which penalized owners of foreign businesses which invested in former American firms that had been nationalized by Fidel Castro's government after the Cuban revolution of 1959. The passage of this law was widely seen as a reprisal for an incident in which Cuban military aircraft shot down two private planes flown by Cuban exiles living in Florida, who were searching for Cubans attempting to escape to Miami.

Sudan edit

During the late 1990s and early 2000s several Christian groups in North America campaigned for disinvestment from Sudan because of the Muslim-dominated government's long conflict with the breakaway, mostly Christian region of Southern Sudan. One particular target of this campaign was the Canadian oil company, Talisman Energy which eventually left the country, and was supplanted by Chinese investors.[11][12]

There is currently a growing movement to divest from those that do business with the Sudanese government responsible for genocide in Darfur. Prompted by the State of Illinois – the first government in the US to divest – scores of public and private-sector entities are now following suit. In New York City, Councilman Eric Gioia introduced a resolution to divest City pension funds from companies doing business with Sudan.[citation needed]

The divestment of assets implicated in funding the government of Sudan, in acknowledgment of acts of terrorism and genocide perpetrated in the Darfur conflict. In the United States, this divestment has taken place at the state level (including Illinois, which led the way, followed by New Jersey, Oregon, and Maine). It has also taken place at many North American university endowments, including Cornell University, Harvard University, Case Western Reserve University, Queen's University, Stanford University, Dartmouth College, Amherst College, Yale University, Brown University, the University of California, the University of Pennsylvania, Brandeis University, the University of Colorado, American University, University of Delaware, Emory University, and the University of Vermont.[citation needed]

The Sudan Divestment Task Force[13] has organized a nationwide group which advocates a targeted divestment policy, to minimize any negative effects on Sudanese civilians while still placing financial pressure on the government. The so-called 'targeted divestment approach' generally permits investment in Sudan, and is thus radically different from the comprehensive divestment that ended apartheid in South Africa.[citation needed]

Under this approach, sponsored by State Senator Jacqueline Collins, public pensions are prohibited from investing in any corporation or private equity firm that conducts business in Sudan, unless authorized to do so by the U.S. Government.

Israel edit

Russia edit

Several companies, such as oil giants BP and Shell, have disinvested from Russia following the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine. TikTok, also as a result of the invasion, also no longer allows new posts to be published in Russian territory, and YouTube does not allow Russian-backed channels to be monetised on the platform.[14]

China edit

In January 2020, students at University of California, Los Angeles passed a resolution calling for divestment from China. In August 2020, Under Secretary of State Keith Krach called upon university administrators in the United States to divest their endowments from companies in China. In the letter, Krach cited an open letter released nationally in May 2020 by College Democrats and College Republicans that was written by the student-organized Athenai Institute, and numerous other organizations and individuals which called for the disclosure of all ties "between centers of higher learning and all Chinese state agencies and proxies".[15]

In October 2021, students at The Catholic University of America unanimously passed a resolution, with the Athenai Institute calling upon their university administration to divest its endowment from companies complicit in the genocide of Uyghurs conducted by the Chinese government.[16] This resulted in Catholic University committing to audit and divest its endowment, becoming the first university in the world to do so. According to Washington Post columnist Josh Rogin, this action marked the beginning of the "Uyghur Genocide University Divestment Movement".[17] Following this, the Advisory Committee on Investor Responsibility at Yale University committed to examine potential investments in Chinese companies tied to human rights abuses.[18] In January 2022, students at Georgetown University circulated an open letter calling for divestment from China. The letter was supported by a coalition of Georgetown's College Democrats, College Republicans, Muslim Student Association, Hong Kong Student Association, as well as individuals. Following this, the Georgetown University Student Association introduced and unanimously passed a resolution calling upon the university to divest its endowment.[19] Similar action was taken by a coalition of students at the George Washington University in February 2022.[20]

Others edit

Myanmar (formerly Burma) has also been the target of disinvestment campaigns (most notably the Massachusetts Burma Law initiated by the state of Massachusetts). Divestment campaigns have also been directed against Saudi Arabia due to allegations of "gender apartheid". The University of California, Riverside's Hillel chapter has a Saudi Divestment petition circulating as of 2007.

In 2007, several major international and Canadian oil companies threatened to withdraw investment from the province of Alberta because of a proposed increase in royalty rates.[21]

Criticism edit

Some hold that divestment campaigns are based on a fundamental misunderstanding of how stock markets work. John Silber, former president of Boston University, observed that while boycotting a company's products would actually affect their business, "once a stock issue has been made, the corporation doesn't care whether you sell it, burn it, or anything else, because they've already got all the money they're ever going to get from that stock. So they don't care."[22]

Regarding the more specific case of South Africa, John Silber recalled:

...when the students were protesting the South African situation, I met with them, and they said BU must divest in General Motors and IBM. And I said, "Why should we do that? Is it immoral to own that stock?" Absolutely immoral to own it. And I said, "So then, we're supposed to sell it to somebody? We can't divest unless we sell it to somebody. And if we burn the stock, that just helps General Motors, because it reduces the amount of stock outstanding, so that can't be right. If we sell it to somebody, we have just gotten rid of our guilt in order to impose guilt on somebody else."[22]

One criticism of divestment focuses on the belief that institutional selling of a certain stock lowers its market value. Therefore, the company's net worth becomes devalued and the owners of the company may lose substantial paper assets. In addition, institutional divestment may encourage other investors to sell their stocks for fear of lower prices, which in turn lowers prices even further. Finally, lower stock prices limits a corporation's ability to sell a portion of their stocks in order to raise funds to expand the business.

This assumption about the intent behind many divestment movements is often incorrect. Divestment executions are often forms of denouncement and delegitimization of an industry, such as in the fossil-fuel divestment movement. Negative public perception can lead to reform and changes in policy, both privately for the company and in the public sphere.

See also edit

Notes and references edit

  1. ^ Bradsher, Keith (1999-12-07). "Ford Announces Its Withdrawal From Global Climate Coalition". The New York Times. Retrieved 2013-07-21.
  2. ^ "GCC Suffers Technical Knockout, Industry defections decimate Global Climate Coalition". June 2022.
  3. ^ "Canvassing Works". Canvassing Works. Retrieved 2013-07-19.
  4. ^ "Page not found - ASH Scotland". www.ashscotland.org.uk. Retrieved 18 October 2018. {{cite web}}: Cite uses generic title (help)
  5. ^ . Archived from the original on 2005-02-25. Retrieved 2007-12-04.
  6. ^ . www.stopwar.org.uk. Archived from the original on 19 October 2018. Retrieved 18 October 2018.
  7. ^ "Liverpool City Council votes to disinvest in arms trade". www.labournet.net. Retrieved 18 October 2018.
  8. ^ "Fossil Free". Retrieved 18 October 2018.
  9. ^ http://www.wearepowershift.org/campaigns/divestcoal 2012-06-15 at the Wayback Machine Power Shift
  10. ^ Elis, Niv. "The Pension Fund Attack On Iran". Forbes. Retrieved 18 October 2018.
  11. ^ http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1058/is_6_117/ai_60026681. {{cite news}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  12. ^ . Archived from the original on 2008-03-03. Retrieved 2007-12-04.
  13. ^ "genocideintervention.net". www.genocideintervention.net. Retrieved 2021-10-13.
  14. ^ Duprey, Rich (2022-03-10). "How Big of a Risk Is Russian Divestment?". The Motley Fool. Retrieved 2022-04-27.
  15. ^ Allen-Ebrahimian, Bethany (2020-05-13). "College Democrats and Republicans denounce racism and the Chinese Communist Party". Axios. Retrieved 2022-03-21.
  16. ^ "The Catholic University of America Divestment Resolution". Washington Post. Retrieved 2022-03-21.
  17. ^ "Opinion | The Uyghur genocide university divestment movement is here". Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved 2022-03-21.
  18. ^ Mousavizadeh, Philip (2022-01-26). "Yale to begin investigating potential Chinese investments in light of human rights concerns". Yale Daily News. Retrieved 2022-03-21.
  19. ^ "GUSA passes a resolution calling for divestment connected to the genocide of Uyghur Muslims". The Georgetown Voice. 2022-02-08. Retrieved 2022-03-21.
  20. ^ "Petition urges GW to divest from ties to Uyghur genocide". The GW Hatchet. 2022-02-14. Retrieved 2022-03-21.
  21. ^ "EnCana says still studying Alberta royalty change". Reuters. 5 November 2007. Retrieved 18 October 2018.
  22. ^ a b "The Lion in Winter: Full Transcript". 15 May 2006. Retrieved 18 October 2018.

disinvestment, this, article, about, form, political, sanction, routine, business, practice, divestment, this, article, lead, section, short, adequately, summarize, points, please, consider, expanding, lead, provide, accessible, overview, important, aspects, a. This article is about a form of political sanction For the routine business practice see divestment This article s lead section may be too short to adequately summarize the key points Please consider expanding the lead to provide an accessible overview of all important aspects of the article April 2021 Disinvestment refers to the use of a concerted economic boycott to pressure a government industry or company towards a change in policy or in the case of governments even regime change The term was first used in the 1980s most commonly in the United States to refer to the use of a concerted economic boycott designed to pressure the government of South Africa into abolishing its policy of apartheid The term has also been applied to actions targeting Iran Sudan Northern Ireland Myanmar Israel and China Contents 1 Examples 1 1 Industries 1 2 Environment 1 3 Companies 1 4 Nations 1 4 1 Iran 1 4 2 South Africa 1 4 3 Northern Ireland 1 4 4 Cuba 1 4 5 Sudan 1 4 6 Israel 1 4 7 Russia 1 4 8 China 1 4 9 Others 2 Criticism 3 See also 4 Notes and referencesExamples editIndustries edit Global Climate Coalition Ford General Motors Texaco Southern Company Exxon and other corporate members of the Global Climate Coalition an industry group opposing the Kyoto Protocol were the target of a national divestment campaign run by Ozone Action in 2000 According to The New York Times when Ford Motor Company left the coalition it was the latest sign of divisions within heavy industry over how to respond to global warming 1 After that between December 1999 and early March 2000 the GCC was deserted by Daimler Chrysler Texaco the Southern Company and General Motors 2 The organization closed in 2002 or in their own words deactivated People associated with the campaign were John Passacantando who served as the executive director of Ozone Action and Phil Radford the then field director of the organization Both men later served as the executive director of Greenpeace 3 Tobacco industry 4 5 Arms trade 6 7 Fossil fuels industry 8 9 Environment edit Further information Fossil fuel divestment There is a movement to disinvest from coal oil and gas companies It is a social movement which urges everyone from individual investors to large endowed institutions to remove their investments to divest from publicly listed oil gas and coal companies with the intention of combating climate change by reducing the amount of greenhouse gases released into the atmosphere and holding the oil gas and coal companies responsible for their role in climate change Founder of the movement Bill McKibben a researcher and academic from University of Victoria and creator of the webpage 350 org stated If it is wrong to wreck the climate then it is wrong to profit from the wreckage We believe organizations that serve the public good should divest from fossil fuels Companies edit Talisman Energy because of its status as the main Western oil company in Sudan in the early 2000s Nations edit Iran edit Main article Disinvestment from Iran Eighteen American states have passed laws requiring the divestment of state pension funds from firms doing business with Iran 10 South Africa edit Main article Disinvestment from South Africa The most frequently encountered method of dis investing was to persuade state county and municipal governments to sell their stock in companies which had a presence in South Africa such shares having been previously placed in the portfolio of the state s county s or city s pension fund Several states and localities did pass legislation ordering the sale of such securities most notably the city of San Francisco An array of celebrities including singer Paul Simon actively supported the cause Many conservatives opposed the disinvestment campaign accusing its advocates of hypocrisy for not also proposing that the same sanctions be leveled on either the Soviet Union or the People s Republic of China Ronald Reagan who was the President of the United States during the time the disinvestment movement was at its peak also opposed it instead favoring a policy of constructive engagement with the Pretoria regime Some offered as an alternative to disinvestment the so called Sullivan Principles named after Reverend Leon Sullivan an African American clergyman who served on the Board of Directors of General Motors These principles called for corporations doing business in South Africa to adhere to strict standards of non discrimination in hiring and promotions so as to set a positive example Northern Ireland edit There was also a less well publicized movement to apply the strategy of disinvestment to Northern Ireland as some prominent Irish American politicians sought to have state and local governments sell their stock in companies doing business in that part of the United Kingdom This movement featured its own counterpart to the Sullivan Principles known as the MacBride Principles named for Nobel Peace Prize winner Sean MacBride which called for American and other foreign companies to take the initiative in nondiscrimination against Roman Catholics by adopting policies resembling affirmative action The effort to disinvest in Northern Ireland met with little success but the United States Congress did pass and then President Bill Clinton signed a law requiring American companies with interests there to implement most of the MacBride Principles in 1998 citation needed Cuba edit Though in place long before the term disinvestment was coined the United States embargo against Cuba meets many of the criteria for designation as such and a provision more closely paralleling the disinvestment strategy aimed at South Africa was added in 1996 when the United States Congress passed the Helms Burton Act which penalized owners of foreign businesses which invested in former American firms that had been nationalized by Fidel Castro s government after the Cuban revolution of 1959 The passage of this law was widely seen as a reprisal for an incident in which Cuban military aircraft shot down two private planes flown by Cuban exiles living in Florida who were searching for Cubans attempting to escape to Miami Sudan edit During the late 1990s and early 2000s several Christian groups in North America campaigned for disinvestment from Sudan because of the Muslim dominated government s long conflict with the breakaway mostly Christian region of Southern Sudan One particular target of this campaign was the Canadian oil company Talisman Energy which eventually left the country and was supplanted by Chinese investors 11 12 There is currently a growing movement to divest from those that do business with the Sudanese government responsible for genocide in Darfur Prompted by the State of Illinois the first government in the US to divest scores of public and private sector entities are now following suit In New York City Councilman Eric Gioia introduced a resolution to divest City pension funds from companies doing business with Sudan citation needed The divestment of assets implicated in funding the government of Sudan in acknowledgment of acts of terrorism and genocide perpetrated in the Darfur conflict In the United States this divestment has taken place at the state level including Illinois which led the way followed by New Jersey Oregon and Maine It has also taken place at many North American university endowments including Cornell University Harvard University Case Western Reserve University Queen s University Stanford University Dartmouth College Amherst College Yale University Brown University the University of California the University of Pennsylvania Brandeis University the University of Colorado American University University of Delaware Emory University and the University of Vermont citation needed The Sudan Divestment Task Force 13 has organized a nationwide group which advocates a targeted divestment policy to minimize any negative effects on Sudanese civilians while still placing financial pressure on the government The so called targeted divestment approach generally permits investment in Sudan and is thus radically different from the comprehensive divestment that ended apartheid in South Africa citation needed Under this approach sponsored by State Senator Jacqueline Collins public pensions are prohibited from investing in any corporation or private equity firm that conducts business in Sudan unless authorized to do so by the U S Government Israel edit Main article Disinvestment from Israel Russia edit Main article Disinvestment from Russia Several companies such as oil giants BP and Shell have disinvested from Russia following the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine TikTok also as a result of the invasion also no longer allows new posts to be published in Russian territory and YouTube does not allow Russian backed channels to be monetised on the platform 14 China edit Main article Disinvestment from China In January 2020 students at University of California Los Angeles passed a resolution calling for divestment from China In August 2020 Under Secretary of State Keith Krach called upon university administrators in the United States to divest their endowments from companies in China In the letter Krach cited an open letter released nationally in May 2020 by College Democrats and College Republicans that was written by the student organized Athenai Institute and numerous other organizations and individuals which called for the disclosure of all ties between centers of higher learning and all Chinese state agencies and proxies 15 In October 2021 students at The Catholic University of America unanimously passed a resolution with the Athenai Institute calling upon their university administration to divest its endowment from companies complicit in the genocide of Uyghurs conducted by the Chinese government 16 This resulted in Catholic University committing to audit and divest its endowment becoming the first university in the world to do so According to Washington Post columnist Josh Rogin this action marked the beginning of the Uyghur Genocide University Divestment Movement 17 Following this the Advisory Committee on Investor Responsibility at Yale University committed to examine potential investments in Chinese companies tied to human rights abuses 18 In January 2022 students at Georgetown University circulated an open letter calling for divestment from China The letter was supported by a coalition of Georgetown s College Democrats College Republicans Muslim Student Association Hong Kong Student Association as well as individuals Following this the Georgetown University Student Association introduced and unanimously passed a resolution calling upon the university to divest its endowment 19 Similar action was taken by a coalition of students at the George Washington University in February 2022 20 Others edit Myanmar formerly Burma has also been the target of disinvestment campaigns most notably the Massachusetts Burma Law initiated by the state of Massachusetts Divestment campaigns have also been directed against Saudi Arabia due to allegations of gender apartheid The University of California Riverside s Hillel chapter has a Saudi Divestment petition circulating as of 2007 In 2007 several major international and Canadian oil companies threatened to withdraw investment from the province of Alberta because of a proposed increase in royalty rates 21 Criticism editSome hold that divestment campaigns are based on a fundamental misunderstanding of how stock markets work John Silber former president of Boston University observed that while boycotting a company s products would actually affect their business once a stock issue has been made the corporation doesn t care whether you sell it burn it or anything else because they ve already got all the money they re ever going to get from that stock So they don t care 22 Regarding the more specific case of South Africa John Silber recalled when the students were protesting the South African situation I met with them and they said BU must divest in General Motors and IBM And I said Why should we do that Is it immoral to own that stock Absolutely immoral to own it And I said So then we re supposed to sell it to somebody We can t divest unless we sell it to somebody And if we burn the stock that just helps General Motors because it reduces the amount of stock outstanding so that can t be right If we sell it to somebody we have just gotten rid of our guilt in order to impose guilt on somebody else 22 One criticism of divestment focuses on the belief that institutional selling of a certain stock lowers its market value Therefore the company s net worth becomes devalued and the owners of the company may lose substantial paper assets In addition institutional divestment may encourage other investors to sell their stocks for fear of lower prices which in turn lowers prices even further Finally lower stock prices limits a corporation s ability to sell a portion of their stocks in order to raise funds to expand the business This assumption about the intent behind many divestment movements is often incorrect Divestment executions are often forms of denouncement and delegitimization of an industry such as in the fossil fuel divestment movement Negative public perception can lead to reform and changes in policy both privately for the company and in the public sphere See also editEconomic and political boycotts of Israel Ethical consumerism Fossil fuel divestment Municipal disinvestment Socially responsible investing PrivatizationNotes and references edit Bradsher Keith 1999 12 07 Ford Announces Its Withdrawal From Global Climate Coalition The New York Times Retrieved 2013 07 21 GCC Suffers Technical Knockout Industry defections decimate Global Climate Coalition June 2022 Canvassing Works Canvassing Works Retrieved 2013 07 19 Page not found ASH Scotland www ashscotland org uk Retrieved 18 October 2018 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Cite uses generic title help The Mac Weekly News Archived from the original on 2005 02 25 Retrieved 2007 12 04 Stop the War Coalition www stopwar org uk Archived from the original on 19 October 2018 Retrieved 18 October 2018 Liverpool City Council votes to disinvest in arms trade www labournet net Retrieved 18 October 2018 Fossil Free Retrieved 18 October 2018 http www wearepowershift org campaigns divestcoal Archived 2012 06 15 at the Wayback Machine Power Shift Elis Niv The Pension Fund Attack On Iran Forbes Retrieved 18 October 2018 http findarticles com p articles mi m1058 is 6 117 ai 60026681 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a Missing or empty title help The Episcopal Church US formally resolves to divest from shareholding in Talisman Energy October 25 2001 Sudanreeves org Sudan Research Analysis and Advocacy Archived from the original on 2008 03 03 Retrieved 2007 12 04 genocideintervention net www genocideintervention net Retrieved 2021 10 13 Duprey Rich 2022 03 10 How Big of a Risk Is Russian Divestment The Motley Fool Retrieved 2022 04 27 Allen Ebrahimian Bethany 2020 05 13 College Democrats and Republicans denounce racism and the Chinese Communist Party Axios Retrieved 2022 03 21 The Catholic University of America Divestment Resolution Washington Post Retrieved 2022 03 21 Opinion The Uyghur genocide university divestment movement is here Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved 2022 03 21 Mousavizadeh Philip 2022 01 26 Yale to begin investigating potential Chinese investments in light of human rights concerns Yale Daily News Retrieved 2022 03 21 GUSA passes a resolution calling for divestment connected to the genocide of Uyghur Muslims The Georgetown Voice 2022 02 08 Retrieved 2022 03 21 Petition urges GW to divest from ties to Uyghur genocide The GW Hatchet 2022 02 14 Retrieved 2022 03 21 EnCana says still studying Alberta royalty change Reuters 5 November 2007 Retrieved 18 October 2018 a b The Lion in Winter Full Transcript 15 May 2006 Retrieved 18 October 2018 Portals nbsp Business and economics nbsp Society Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Disinvestment amp oldid 1202921958, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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