University of California student regent

Student regent of the University of California

Incumbent
Abraham 'Avi' Oved

since July 1, 2015
Member of Regents of the University of California
Nominator University of California Student Association Board of Directors
Regents' Special Committee to Select a Student Regent
Student government nominating commissions
Appointer Regents of the University of California
Term length One year
(Preceded by approx. one-year term as Regent-designate)
Constituting instrument Constitution of California
Formation 1975
First holder Carol Mock
Deputy University of California Student Regent-designate
Salary Two-year full tuition waiver or scholarship
Website regents.universityofcalifornia.edu/about/members-and-advisors/student-regent.html

The student regent is a position on the University of California Board of Regents created by a 1974 California ballot proposition to represent University of California (UC) students on the university system's governing board. It is required by the California Constitution. Student regents serve an approximately one-year term as 'student regent-designate', followed by a one-year term as a full voting member of the Regents. The current student regent is Abraham 'Avi' Oved, a UCLA undergraduate student; the current student regent-designate is Marcela Ramirez, a UC Riverside graduate student.

Selection process

The University of California Student Association (UCSA) Board of Directors and the Regents’ Special Committee to Select a Student Regent are all involved in the annual selection of the student regent. They participate in a process where three finalists are selected. The Regents may reject the list of finalists. When the finalist list is finalized, the Regents vote to select the student regent. The person then selected serves as the student regent-designate, shadowing the student regent until the beginning of their formal term on July 1.[1][2][3] Traditionally, the position alternates between undergraduate and graduate students as well as between the various UC campuses. However, some students involved in the selection process have said that it may be biased towards graduate students as well as students from UCLA and UC Berkeley, traditionally considered the flagship campuses of the UC system.[4]

History

In May 2011, student regent Jesse Cheng resigned after being arrested for allegedly committing sexual battery against a UCLA graduate student. Cheng was found responsible for "unwanted touching" by UC Irvine's student conduct office, but the local district attorney declined to file charges against him. The student regent-designate at the time, Alfredo Mireles, was appointed voting student regent after Cheng's resignation.[5][6][7][3]

In 2013, the nomination of Sadia Saifuddin, the first Muslim student regent, was criticized by pro-Israel and conservative entities, such as StandWithUs and David Horowitz, due to Saifuddin's past support for disinvestment from Israel. In the final vote to appoint Saifuddin, only Regent Richard C. Blum abstained from voting in favor.[8][9] During June 2013, student regent Jonathan Stein was a member of the Regents committee that selected Janet Napolitano to be nominated and presented to the full Board of Regents for a confirmation vote.

In 2014, the appointment of Saifuddin's successor, Avi Oved, was opposed by students and student groups, including Students for Justice in Palestine, due to conflict of interest and transparency concerns. The Daily Californian revealed that when running for a student government position at UCLA, Oved received campaign donations from Israeli-American businessman Adam Milstein that were secretly routed through Hillel's UCLA chapter. Oved and his supporters responded that UCLA's student government election regulations did not require disclosure of donors, and that the opposition was motivated by anti-Semitism. The UCSA nominating committee voted to delay its nomination of Oved in order to fully investigate, but the Board of Regents rejected the delay and voted to appoint Oved, with only Saifuddin voting in opposition.[10][11][12][13][14][15]

Student regents have also been noted for voting in favor of affirmative action,[16] and against nuclear weapons research[17][18][19] and fee increases.[20]

List of student regents

List of student regents[21][22]
No. Student regent Term as regent Campus Student status during term Major or discipline during term
1 Carol Mock 1975–1976 Santa Barbara senior political science
2 Daryn Peeples 1976–1977 Berkeley senior English
3 Michael S. Salerno 1977–1978 Davis graduate law
4 Renee Turkell 1978–1979 Los Angeles senior English
5 Hector C. Lozano 1979–1980 Davis senior sociology
6 Leslie K. Lurie 1980–1981 Los Angeles junior political science/communications
7 David A. Neuman 1981–1982 Los Angeles junior communications studies
8 Linda Rae Sabo 1982–1983 San Diego senior philosophy
9 Richard Anderson 1983–1984 Los Angeles graduate psychology
10 Fred N. Gaines 1984–1985 Berkeley graduate law
11 Janice C. Eberly 1985–1986 Davis junior agricultural economics
12 David B. Hoffman 1986–1987 Los Angeles sophomore political science
13 Jacquelyn Ross 1987–1988 Davis senior applied behavioral science
14 Deborah Thorpe 1988–1989 Davis junior chemistry
15 Guillermo Rodriguez 1989–1990 Berkeley junior sociology/communications
16 Jenny Doh 1990–1991 Irvine senior political science
17 Diana Darnell 1991–1992 San Francisco graduate anatomy
18 Alex Wong 1992–1993 Berkeley graduate law
19 Darby Morrisroe 1993–1994 Davis senior political science
20 Terrence Wooten 1994–1995 Riverside senior biology
21 Edward Gomez 1995–1996 Riverside graduate history
22 Jess Bravin 1996–1997 Berkeley graduate law
23 Kathryn McClymond 1997–1998 Santa Barbara graduate religious studies
24 Max R. Espinoza 1998–1999 Los Angeles senior political science/Chicano studies
25 Michelle K. Pannor 1999–2000 Berkeley senior conservation resources
26 Justin W. Fong 2000–2001 Los Angeles graduate public policy
27 Tracy M. Davis 2001–2002 Los Angeles graduate higher education and organizational change
28 Dexter Ligot-Gordon 2002–2003 Berkeley graduate
29 Matthew Murray 2003–2004 Berkeley junior architecture
30 Jodi Anderson 2004–2005 Los Angeles graduate higher education
31 Adam Rosenthal 2005–2006 Davis graduate law
32 María Ledesma 2006–2007 Los Angeles graduate higher education
33 Benjamin Allen 2007–2008 Berkeley graduate law
34 D’Artagnan Scorza 2008–2009 Los Angeles graduate education studies
35 Jesse Bernal 2009–2010 Santa Barbara graduate education studies
36 Jesse Cheng 2010–2011 May (resigned) Irvine undergraduate
37 Alfredo Mireles Jr. 2011 May – 2012 San Francisco graduate
38 Jonathan Stein 2012–2013 Berkeley graduate master's/law
39 Cinthia Flores 2013–2014 Irvine graduate law
40 Sadia Saifuddin 2014–2015 Berkeley undergraduate
41 Abraham "Avi" Oved (current) 2015–2016 Los Angeles undergraduate economics
42 Marcela Ramirez (designate) 2016-2017 Riverside graduate higher education administration and policy[23]

References

  1. "Regents Policy 1202: Policy on Appointment of Student Regent". Regents of the University of California. Retrieved 2016-03-18.
  2. "Student Regent". Regents of the University of California. Retrieved 2016-03-18.
  3. 1 2 Kelly, Devin (2011-05-16). "Student regent Jesse Cheng resigns". The Daily Bruin. Retrieved 2016-03-18.
  4. Park, Jeong (2014-07-28). "Recent UC student regents hail primarily from flagship campuses". The Daily Bruin. Archived from the original on 2014-10-22. Retrieved 2016-03-18.
  5. Coker, Matt (2011-05-16). "[BREAKING:] Jesse Cheng, UC Student Regent, Resigns". OC Weekly.
  6. Coker, Matt (2011-02-21). "[UPDATED] Jesse Cheng, UC Student Regent, Was Arrested for Alleged Sexual Battery on Female Student in His Apartment Near UCI, DA Didn't File Charges". OC Weekly.
  7. Lee, Traci Garling; Gao, David (2011-02-15). "Student Regent Under Investigation [Updated: Feb. 16]". New University. Archived from the original on 2015-04-10. Retrieved 2016-03-23.
  8. Leff, Lisa (2013-07-17). "UC Student Regent Nominee Sadia Saifuddin Draws Rare Ire From Conservatives". The Huffington Post. Archived from the original on 2013-07-21.
  9. Gordon, Larry (2013-07-17). "First Muslim student regent approved by UC board". The Los Angeles Times.
  10. Gordon, Larry (2014-06-16). "UC appoints Jewish student regent amid controversy". The Los Angeles Times.
  11. Hunt, Chloe (2014-07-03). "Funds to UCLA student political party came from outside sources, leaked emails show". The Daily Californian.
  12. Kadifa, George; Pacheco, Jorge (2014-07-16). "A Question of Transparency, Legality, and Accountability". The Daily Californian.
  13. Abbott, Katy (2014-07-01). "Student regent-designate nominee criticizes allegations of wrongdoing". The Daily Californian.
  14. Li, Anna (2014-07-16). "UC Board of Regents confirms Avi Oved as student regent-designate". The Daily Californian.
  15. Navid, Marium; Jagadeesan, Viveka; Kurwa, Rahim (2014-07-14). "Avi Oved is not our student regent". The Daily Californian.
  16. Chinoy, Sahil (2015-05-13). "Representative or Trustee? The complex history of the UC Student Regent". The Daily Californian. Archived from the original on 2015-05-17. Retrieved 2016-03-18.
  17. Mathews, Jay (1985-09-20). "California university panel backs nuclear arms research". The Washington Post. Retrieved 2016-03-18.
  18. "UC Renews Pacts on Nuclear Arms Research for U.S.". The Los Angeles Times. 1987-09-19. Retrieved 2016-03-18.
  19. McNary, Dave (1990-09-21). "UC moves toward renewing nuke lab pacts". UPI. Retrieved 2016-03-18.
  20. Morrison, Patt (2014-12-10). "Column: UC's Muslim student regent tackles Bill Maher, tuition and more". The Los Angeles Times.
  21. "UC Student Regents, 1975-present". University of California Office of the President. Archived from the original on 2014-01-11. Retrieved 2016-03-18.
  22. "Alumni and Student Honors". UCLA. Archived from the original on 2016-03-06. Retrieved 2016-03-18.
  23. Lovekin, Kris (2015-06-02). "UC Riverside Grad Student Nominated as Student Regent for University of California". UCR Today (Press release). University of California, Riverside. Archived from the original on 2015-06-15. Retrieved 2016-03-18.

External links

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