President Eisgruber issues statement on federal immigration executive order

Princeton President Christopher L. Eisgruber issued the following statement to the University community on Sunday, Jan. 29, 2017.

To the Princeton community,

Many of you have written to express concerns about the recent federal executive order barring entry to the United States for refugees and for citizens of seven predominantly Muslim countries.  I share those concerns.  Since its early days, when the College of New Jersey recruited a transformative president from Scotland, this University has depended on America's ability to attract and engage with talented people from around the world.   Princeton today benefits tremendously from the presence of extraordinary individuals of diverse nationalities and faiths, and we will support them vigorously.

The University has taken steps already to assist Princeton students and scholars who are affected by the executive order, including a small number who are currently traveling abroad and face difficulties returning to the United States.  Dean of the Faculty Deborah Prentice and Dean of the Graduate School Sanjeev Kulkarni have issued messages providing preliminary information about the order and its consequences. Staff members in the Davis International Center and elsewhere on campus are working around the clock to assess the full impact of the order and to aid and counsel members of our community, including those who are currently outside the United States.

The legal implications of the executive order have been evolving rapidly.  My colleagues in the University administration will continue to monitor developments and identify appropriate ways to assist affected individuals.  We will update the community as needed to ensure that our students, faculty, and staff know how to obtain information or help.

Princeton will also continue to safeguard personal information about non-citizens as it does for all of its students, faculty, and staff.  As I noted in a previous letter to the community, Princeton has policies in place to protect the privacy of every member of the University community.  We do not disclose private information about our students, faculty, or staff to law enforcement officers unless we are presented with a valid subpoena or comparably binding requirement.

As we seek to aid and protect individuals in our community, we are also supporting legislative efforts to assist non-citizens, including the BRIDGE Act that would extend protection for students covered by DACA (the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals policy).  Princeton's current activity builds on a consistent history of advocacy for policies permitting foreign scholars and students to come to the United States.  Much of that advocacy has occurred in cooperation with the Association of American Universities, of which Princeton is a member.  The AAU has issued a statement of concern about the recent executive order, and we endorse that statement fully.

Princeton's position on immigration policy issues reflects our conviction that every single person on this campus has benefited from the ability of people to cross borders in search of learning or a better life.  That is emphatically true for me.  My mother and her family arrived in this country as refugees escaping from a war-torn continent.  They would have perished had they been denied visas.  My father first came to America as an exchange student from a country that had recently been at war with the United States, and he then studied at Purdue University as a foreign graduate student.

Immigration has been a source of creativity and strength for this country throughout its history.  It is indispensable to the mission and the excellence of America's universities, which enhance this country's economy, security, and well-being through the students they educate and the ideas they generate. Princeton will continue supporting students, faculty, and staff of all nationalities and faiths, and we will continue making the case for policies that simultaneously respect this nation's legitimate security interests and allow for the free and vital movement of students and scholars across borders.

Christopher L. Eisgruber

President, Princeton University

January 29, 2017