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Huge crowd gathered at UCLA near Murphy Hall in rally to oppose UC Regents’ money investments in corporations that do business with South Africa. The students boycotted classes from noon to 2 p.m. in effort to relay their displeasure to the Regents. Many speakers took turns to denounce what they called racism and apartheid of South Africa. Photograph dated April 24, 1985. (Photo by Mike
Sergieff, Los Angeles Herald Examiner archive via Los Angeles Public Library Photo Collection)
Huge crowd gathered at UCLA near Murphy Hall in rally to oppose UC Regents’ money investments in corporations that do business with South Africa. The students boycotted classes from noon to 2 p.m. in effort to relay their displeasure to the Regents. Many speakers took turns to denounce what they called racism and apartheid of South Africa. Photograph dated April 24, 1985. (Photo by Mike Sergieff, Los Angeles Herald Examiner archive via Los Angeles Public Library Photo Collection)
Kaitlyn Schallhorn is a city editor with the Orange County Register. She previously served as the editor in chief of The Missouri Times, overseeing print, television, and newsletter coverage of the State Capitol. Throughout her career, Kaitlyn has covered political campaigns across the U.S., including the 2016 presidential election, and humanitarian aid efforts in Africa and the Middle East. She studied journalism at Winthrop University in South Carolina.
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“Is activism dead?”

Juxtapose that question about student advocacy with the that have taken over college campuses across the country in recent weeks, and it seems the answer is a resounding no.

Encampments — where students have erected tents, tailgating canopies and makeshift barricades — have in recent weeks. Students are protesting, calling for an end to the and an end to universities’ financial ties with certain Israeli companies.

Many have been peaceful — at Chapman University in Orange on Friday, where students wrote letters and chanted. On some campuses, to break up encampments or remove students who have taken over buildings and prevented other students from accessing classrooms or libraries.

But at a few other places, that hasn’t been the case; at UCLA last week, with demonstrators.

College campuses were once the epicenter for activism and demonstration — particularly during the Vietnam War era.

In more recent years, however, campuses have been quieter. That question – “Is activism dead?” – was a thoughtful one when it was , the Daily Trojan, seven years ago as on campus.

But that was 2017, before the militant group in Israel on Oct. 7, killing about 1,200 people and abducting another 250.

Before Israel unleashed its retaliatory siege; skyrocketed to an estimated 34,500 people.

And before the on American college campuses in recent weeks, among them protesters at USC and UCLA.

A kaleidoscope of tents

So why did — seemingly in the blink of an eye — college students take on the mantle of decrying what they perceive as injustice in a small area in another hemisphere?

While there’s something to be said about the rapidity of the encampments cropping up on campuses across the U.S., the issue itself — turmoil in the Middle East, debate over who the “good guys” are and even if there are any — has percolated for quite some time. The conflict between Israel and Palestine can be .

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    UC Irvine was among many college campuses that participated in protests against the Vietnam War. (Orange County Register file photo)

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    Huge crowd gathered at UCLA near Murphy Hall in rally to oppose UC Regents’ money investments in corporations that do business with South Africa. The students boycotted classes from noon to 2 p.m. in effort to relay their displeasure to the Regents. Many speakers took turns to denounce what they called racism and apartheid of South Africa. Photograph dated April 24, 1985. (Photo by Mike Sergieff, Los Angeles Herald Examiner archive via Los Angeles Public Library Photo Collection)

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    Pounding on pans to attract attention, anti-apartheid demonstrators are halted on the steps of UCLA’s Royce Hall by a cordon of state police. When they attempted to rush one entrance, right, they were repulsed by campus police. Photo dated June 11, 1985 (Photo by Mike Sergieff, Los Angeles Herald Examiner archive via Los Angeles Public Library Photo Collection)

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    A large crowd gathered at UCLA’s Tent City for an anti-apartheid rally. Photograph dated May 1, 1985. (Photo by Mike Mullen, Los Angeles Herald Examiner archive via Los Angeles Public Library Photo Collection)

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But now there’s media, particularly social media, and students are quickly and easily and often seeing images from the atrocities of the war.

“It’s a very visual tipping point,” said Rebecca Dolhinow, a Cal State Fullerton professor whose research includes youth social justice activism. “Students are back on campus and they’re feeling more comfortable here with the COVID threat less and less imminent.”

Organizers of demonstrations at Southern California campuses are using Instagram to list their objectives and demands, request specific supplies, share resources on legal rights and de-escalation techniques and advertise schedules for speakers. They’re also trading tips, what worked on their campuses, and are promoting other schools’ demonstrations.

This generation of college students, said David Farber, a history professor at the University of Kansas who studies activism in America, “has come to believe in a kind of Manichean world,” where there are only two sides to an issue, a dual struggle between good and evil.

“They tend to see the world in oppressors and the oppressed, and that’s good in a lot of ways,” said Farber.

“There’s an incredible sense of injustice here, and people are really appalled,” Dolhinow said. “It is something that for a lot of students, who otherwise aren’t keen on partisan politics, feel like this is a human rights issue, and they may not want to step out on abortion, may not want to step out on something else, but they feel they have to step out on this because it’s simply wrong.”

And Israel, Farber said, “has come to be a stand-in in international politics for a lot of students,” he said, as “a bad nation, maybe even an evil nation, in the eyes of some young people who are progressive.”

Back to the beginning

The right to protest, especially historically, is an integral part of the college experience, said Graham Piro with the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression, a nonprofit that protects free speech rights on college campuses.

“In many ways, being in college is how you prepare to participate in American society when you graduate,” Piro said. “And the First Amendment gives us the right to voice our concerns.”

Students infamously exercised those rights in the ’60s and ’70s, staging large protests in opposition to U.S. involvement in the Vietnam War. Massive demonstrations sprung up on campuses across the country, including here in Southern California, but were more “militant” and “violent” compared to the pro-Palestinian demonstrations now, said Robert Cohen, an NYU history professor and expert in student activism.

; students got hurt — or worse. Saturday marked opened fire on unarmed anti-war student demonstrators at Kent State, killing four students and injuring another nine people.

Students championed other causes around that time as well.

In 1967, UC Irvine had been open for less than two years before on its Gateway Plaza.

UC President Clark Kerr, a defender of free speech and debate on college campuses, had been fired by the Regents. , show a large group of students rallying in support of Kerr.

Rewind some 30 years, and in 1934, took to Royce Quad in protest of the suspension of five students for alleged communist ties. That was about half the student population at the time, , and the students were eventually allowed to return to school.

At UC Riverside, students protested during a visit from then-Gov. Ronald Reagan in 1970. They clashed with police and , longtime political science professor Ron Loveridge recalled.

And then there were, at many UC schools, protests in solidarity with the Free Speech Movement at UC Berkeley in the 1960s.

Notably, though, USC, a private school, does not have that same reputation for campus activism.

As Zev Yaroslavsky, a former L.A. County supervisor who graduated from UCLA, : “This is not the first university you think of when you think of protests and occupying the central quad and confronting the police. Berkeley and Harvard? Sure. But USC?”

But it was there, at USC, during a pro-Palestinian protest at Alumni Park on April 24.

A week later, at a Palestine Solidarity Encampment at UCLA.

There is certainly no question about the vitality of student activism — at USC or anywhere — today.

“Student activism, for much of the time I’ve been studying it, is something that’s been almost dormant. It’s not been full-throttled since, say, the Vietnam era,” said Dolhinow.

Sure, there have been causes young people have been passionate about in more recent years: police brutality, particularly in the wake of ‘s death in 2020; and the #MeToo movement that shed light on sexual harassment and assault and the abuse of power.

But those demonstrations were largely community-led rather than organized by college students, Dolhinow said. In recent years, student-led protests centered more on campus issues, like abuse by a faculty member or a problem within a department.

In 2014, for example, were sent to Asian departments at both the Westwood campus and at USC.

“This isn’t something that happened here” in the U.S., Dolhinow said of the catalyst for the current demonstrations. “We’re protesting events that happened in another country, and a lot of students don’t know where this part of the world is. … They couldn’t put their finger on Israel on a map without help.”

What does success look like?

Rapidity aside, Farber and other experts liken the pro-Palestinian demonstrations to the South African anti-apartheid divestment movement that took off in the ’80s. Students then wanted their schools to cut financial ties with companies that supported South Africa.

Students “tried to make visible a problem that too few Americans understood,” said Farber. “And they did that by literally being visible, by creating encampments.”

But success — if there is any — may look different for the current crop of student activists.

“I don’t think they’re going to win their demands for divestment in most places,” said Cohen, the NYU professor.

“Unlike the anti-apartheid movement, there was no ‘apartheid constituency’ in the U.S.,” Cohen said of the previous movement. “But there is still strong support for Israel. … That’s not a demand that’s very realistic.”

Recent surveys have found that support for Israel or Palestine largely varies depending on age in the U.S.

About a third of people between 18 and 29 years old said they sided more with Palestinians than Israelis in , compared to 14% who sympathized with Israeli people.

On the other hand, 47% of those surveyed who were at least 65 years old sympathized more with Israelis; only 9% chose Palestinian people.

But that’s not to say demonstrators won’t have any impact at all, said Cohen.

At Brown University in Rhode Island, an encampment came down last week after to hear students’ arguments in support of divestment from “companies that facilitate the Israeli occupation of Palestinian territory.”

Closer to home, Pomona College of divestment from “corporations complicit with war crimes and other human rights violations committed by the Israeli government in Israel/Palestine.”

Overall, though, divestment is “not a demand that’s very realistic,” said Cohen.

While Cohen considers divestment largely unlikely, he noted that it is an election year, and that’s where students could have a greater, more visible effect.

“They probably will have an impact on politics because (the demonstrations) bring the war to people’s attention because at least some students don’t support the war will have some reservations about supporting President Biden” in November, he said.

Correction: David Farber is a history professor at the University of Kansas who studies activism in the U.S.

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