Overall Rating Gold - expired
Overall Score 65.74
Liaison Tavey Capps
Submission Date Jan. 31, 2011
Executive Letter Download

STARS v1.0

Duke University
Tier2-2: Socially Responsible Investment Policy

Status Score Responsible Party
Complete 0.25 / 0.25 Tavey Capps
Environmental Sustainability Director
Office of the Executive Vice President
"---" indicates that no data was submitted for this field

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Does the institution have a policy or directive to consider the social and/or environmental impacts of investment decisions, in addition to financial considerations?:
Yes

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A brief description of the socially responsible investment policy:
Guideline on Socially Responsible Investing: To fulfill its educational and humanitarian purposes, Duke University must manage its investment assets wisely. Thus the primary fiduciary responsibility of the Board of Trustees in overseeing the management of the University's investment assets must be to maximize the financial return on those resources, taking into account the amount of risk appropriate for the University. At the same time, the University wishes to be a good corporate citizen and a responsible and ethical investor. The authority of its Board of Trustees to take ethical factors into account when setting investment policies and practices derives from the very stewardship responsibilities which attend the ownership of endowment securities. We recognize that sometimes a corporation's policies or practices can cause substantial social injury -- that they may have a gravely injurious impact on employees, consumers, and/or other individuals or groups that results from specific actions by a company. For example, corporate actions may violate domestic or international laws intended to protect individuals and/or groups against deprivation of health, safety, or civil, political, and human rights. Thus for investments not governed by the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA), when the Board of Trustees judges that corporate policies or practices cause substantial social injury, it will give weight to this factor in investment practices related to corporate securities. Actions the University takes may or may not materially affect an offending corporation, but such actions may have significant symbolic value. When the University community has engaged in substantive discourse on an issue and expressed broad concern that substantial social injury is being caused by such policies or practices, either the president and senior officers or members of the University community may ask the University Priorities Committee (UPC) to examine it in depth. Upon receiving a recommendation from the UPC, the president and senior officers, if they concur, will forward that recommendation to the Board of Trustees. Where the Board of Trustees finds that a company's activities or policies cause substantial social injury, and that a desired change in the company's activities would have a direct and material effect in alleviating such injury, it may instruct the Duke University Management Company (DUMAC) to take appropriate action, including the exercise of the University's practicable shareholder rights to seek modification of the company's activities to eliminate or reduce the injury, using such means as a) direct correspondence with management b) proxy votes c) sponsoring shareholder resolutions. If the Board of Trustees further concludes that the company has been afforded reasonable opportunity to alter its activities, and that divestment will not impair the capacity of the University to carry out its educational mission (for example, by causing significant adverse action on the part of governmental agencies), then it may instruct DUMAC and its managers to divest the securities in question within a reasonable period of time.

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The website URL where information about the policy is available:
Data source(s) and notes about the submission:
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