What Can We Learn From the NYU Graduate Union’s Historic Strike? – The Nation Fund for Independent Journalism

  • About Us
  • What We Do
    • Internship
    • Studentnation
    • 2025 Puffin Student Writing Fellows
    • 2025 Student Journalism Conference
    • Nation Classroom
    • Fellowship for the Future of Journalism
  • Memorial Fund
    • The Victor Navasky Memorial Fund
    • Celebrating Victor Event
    • Donate to the Memorial Fund
    • When Giving Feels Personal
  • News
  • Apply
  • Join us
  • Donate
Skip to content

NEWS

News > What Can We Learn From the NYU Graduate Union’s Historic Strike?

November 22, 2021

What Can We Learn From the NYU Graduate Union’s Historic Strike?

By Sarah Burke

The successful strike earlier this year was not organized overnight—it took months of preparation and outreach efforts.

By Mansee Khurana

The NYU Graduate Student Organizing Committee authorization vote to strike rally at Gould Plaza in March 2021. (Lev Radin / Shutterstock)

When Arundhati Velamur was in the fourth year of her education PhD program at New York University, she often had conversations with her colleagues about how their department seemed to only hire external candidates for faculty positions. “It was something we kept talking about, and a lot of us were wondering how we could bring this issue up to our department,” said Velamur, who went to the Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development. “So we went to the graduate student union and asked how they could help us.”

New York University’s Graduate Student Organizing Committee (GSOC) quickly responded, putting Velamur and her colleagues in touch with their departmental steward, the first line of contact for members with grievances, and helping them learn more about the ongoing efforts to negotiate a new contract for graduate student workers. “At this point, I was already seeing emails from GSOC in my inbox, but the help with the department organizing helped show me that this organization could really effect change on campus,” Velamur said.

In 2002, NYU’s graduate union, which is associated with United Auto Workers (UAW) Local 2110, became the first graduate union to be officially recognized by a private university after a semester-long strike, and since then union organizers have been increasing the rights of graduate workers by fighting for increased stipends and employee benefits for graduate workers. None of these worker benefits have come easily; the union has never been able to negotiate with the university without the looming threat of a strike.

Read full article.

Category: Featured StudentNation

Featured

Why Texas Universities’ Drag Bans Backfired
Journalism Schools Are Facing Dual Pressures Under Trump
40 Years After the MOVE Bombing, the Scars Remain

More Articles

520 8th Avenue, Fl 21
New York, NY 10018

  • Contact Us
  • Apply
  • Support Us
  • Privacy Policy

All content © 2025. All Rights Reserved.

The Nation Fund for Independent Journalism is a 501(c)(3) organization, and donations are tax deductible to the fullest extent provided by law.

Follow Us

The Nation Fund for Independent Journalism is a 501(c)(3) organization, and donations are tax deductible to the fullest extent provided by law.

All content © 2025. All Rights Reserved.