Overall Rating Gold - expired
Overall Score 65.52
Liaison Andrew D'Amico
Submission Date Feb. 28, 2018
Executive Letter Download

STARS v2.1

Princeton University
PA-8: Committee on Investor Responsibility

Status Score Responsible Party
Complete 2.00 / 2.00 Jennifer Birmingham
Managing Director
Princeton University Investment Company
"---" indicates that no data was submitted for this field

Does the institution have a formally established and active committee on investor responsibility (CIR) that makes recommendations to fund decision-makers on socially and environmentally responsible investment opportunities across asset classes?:
Yes

The charter or mission statement of the CIR or other body which reflects social and environmental concerns or a brief description of how the CIR is tasked to address social and environmental concerns:

The Resources Committee of the Council of the Princeton University Community was established in 1970 to “consider questions of general policy concerning the procurement and management of the University’s financial resources.” The Resources Committee is responsible for recommendations to the University Trustees as to when the Trustees should take a position regarding issues of broader social concern. The key criteria used in making this determination include the presence of “considerable, thoughtful, and sustained campus interest,” determination that a core University value is at stake, and the ability of the University community to reach consensus on a response.


Does the CIR include staff representation?:
Yes

Does the CIR include faculty representation?:
Yes

Does the CIR include student representation?:
Yes

Members of the CIR, including affiliations and role (e.g. student, faculty, staff, alumni):

Prof. Blair Schoene, Associate Professor of Geosciences (Chair)
Prof. Bo Honoré, Class of 1913 Professor of Political Economy
Prof. Michael Littman, Professor of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering
Colette Johnson, Graduate Student, Department of English
Grace Obiofuma, Undergraduate Student, Class of 2018
William Pugh, Undergraduate Student, Class of 2020
Carolyn Ainslie, Vice President for Finance and Treasurer
Janet Finnie, Director, University Health Services

Sits with the Committee in non-voting capacity:
Cecily Swanson, Director of Studies, Mathey College
Susan Ciniglio, Senior Associate, Princeton University Investment Company
Brandon Gaines, Division Project Manager, Office of Finance and Treasury


Examples of CIR actions during the previous three years:

During the previous three years, the Resources Committee reviewed proposals related to three primary issues: (1) fossil fuels and sustainability, (2) companies involved in Israel’s activities the West Bank, and (3) private prisons. After evaluating the first two issues in depth, the Committee declined to recommend any action to the University’s Trustees. The Committee continues to evaluate the proposal for disassociation from the private prison industry and has yet to issue its conclusion.


The website URL where information about the programs or initiatives is available:
Additional documentation to support the submission:
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Data source(s) and notes about the submission:

Princeton University’s primary mechanism for consideration of investment-driven social responsibility issues is the Resources Committee of the Council of the Princeton University Community. The Resources Committee was created in 1970 and includes members of the faculty, undergraduate students, graduate students, and staff. The key criteria for consideration of issues, including matters of environmental or social concern, are the presence of “considerable, thoughtful, and sustained campus interest,” determination that a core University value is at stake, and the ability of the University community to reach consensus on a response. The Resources Committee has a broad mandate to help identify issues of concern to the University community, provide opportunities for discussion and education, research and review alternatives, and recommend a course of action that shares broad support across campus constituencies. When appropriate, the Resources Committee makes investment recommendations to the Trustees regarding issues of broad social concern.

At a time when the University’s portfolio included substantial investment in traditional stocks and was managed directly by the Trustee Committee on Finance, the Resources Committee made proxy voting recommendations to the Trustees. However, as investment instruments changed and the Princeton University Investment Company (PRINCO) assumed day-to-day management of the Endowment, the number of opportunities to vote proxies decreased significantly. PRINCO, an internal unit of the University responsible for investing the Endowment, allocates all but a very small fraction of the portfolio to commingled funds and partnerships in which proxy votes cannot be controlled directly. As a result, the Resources Committee stopped evaluating proxy ballots and instead devoted its energies to creating a venue to discuss investment-related issues of significant interest more broadly. This venue allows the Committee to contemplate and implement change on a larger and more systemic basis than the very narrow, indeed negligible, basis provided by proxy voting. Princeton believes this approach is more likely to create opportunities for individual and institutional change and is more effective and efficient than a narrow focus on proxy voting and investment restrictions.


Princeton University’s primary mechanism for consideration of investment-driven social responsibility issues is the Resources Committee of the Council of the Princeton University Community. The Resources Committee was created in 1970 and includes members of the faculty, undergraduate students, graduate students, and staff. The key criteria for consideration of issues, including matters of environmental or social concern, are the presence of “considerable, thoughtful, and sustained campus interest,” determination that a core University value is at stake, and the ability of the University community to reach consensus on a response. The Resources Committee has a broad mandate to help identify issues of concern to the University community, provide opportunities for discussion and education, research and review alternatives, and recommend a course of action that shares broad support across campus constituencies. When appropriate, the Resources Committee makes investment recommendations to the Trustees regarding issues of broad social concern.

At a time when the University’s portfolio included substantial investment in traditional stocks and was managed directly by the Trustee Committee on Finance, the Resources Committee made proxy voting recommendations to the Trustees. However, as investment instruments changed and the Princeton University Investment Company (PRINCO) assumed day-to-day management of the Endowment, the number of opportunities to vote proxies decreased significantly. PRINCO, an internal unit of the University responsible for investing the Endowment, allocates all but a very small fraction of the portfolio to commingled funds and partnerships in which proxy votes cannot be controlled directly. As a result, the Resources Committee stopped evaluating proxy ballots and instead devoted its energies to creating a venue to discuss investment-related issues of significant interest more broadly. This venue allows the Committee to contemplate and implement change on a larger and more systemic basis than the very narrow, indeed negligible, basis provided by proxy voting. Princeton believes this approach is more likely to create opportunities for individual and institutional change and is more effective and efficient than a narrow focus on proxy voting and investment restrictions.

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