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Georgetown University Student Association

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Georgetown University Student Association
AbbreviationGUSA
Formation1984
Membership
6,675 undergraduate students
President
Jaden Cobb (CAS '25)
Vice President
Sanaa Mehta (SFS '25)
Speaker of the Senate
Meriam Ahmad (SFS '26)
Websitegustudentassociation.com

The Georgetown University Student Association (GUSA) is the undergraduate student government of Georgetown University in Washington, D.C. The GUSA bylaws state that the organization's mission is "to (i) empower Hoyas by giving them control over resources, (ii) improve the student quality of life, (iii) safeguard Hoya rights, (iv) involve Hoyas in the governance of the University, and (v) ensure that the University conducts itself in an ethical and responsible manner."[1]

Structure

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Executive Branch

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The Executive Branch is made up of a President and Vice President, elected by the undergraduate student body each November to lead for the following calendar year, as well as a staff whose size and structure is largely up to the discretion of the President and Vice President.[2] Since 2023, the executive staff has been restructured and expanded to address many issues raised by members of the undergraduate student body. Membership on cabinet staff, executive staff, and general staff positions is application-based and open to all undergraduate students.[3] The President and Vice President also appoint student representatives to a variety of external boards and committees, and all executive staff positions and external board appointments are subject to review and confirmation by the Senate.[4]

Current and Former Executives
Year President Vice President
2024 Jaden Cobb Sanaa Mehta
2023 Camber Vincent Alyssa Hirai
2022* Kole Wolfe Zeke Ume-Ukeje
2021-2022 Nile Blass Nicole Sanchez
2020-2021 Nicolo Ferretti Bryce Badger
2019-2020 Norman Francis Jr. Aleida Olvera
2018-2019 Juan Martinez Kenna Chick
2017-2018 Kamar Mack Jessica Andino
2016-2017 Enushe Khan Chris Fisk
2015-2016 Joe Luther Connor Rohan

*Due to a change in election timelines, beginning in 2022 the GUSA Executive serves for a calendar year rather than a school year

Legislative Branch

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The Legislative Branch is made up of a 29-person Senate which can amend the GUSA bylaws, confirm executive and judicial appointments, and engage in advocacy through mechanisms that include resolutions and ad hoc committees. The Senate is led by a Speaker and Vice Speaker during the academic year and over the summer. The Senate also controls the process by which more than $1 million is allocated to student organizations. The process is overseen by the Senate's Finance and Appropriations Committee, which allocates the sum total funds generated by the Student Activities Fee ($164 per student in 2018[5]) each year to five club advisory boards, the Lecture Fund, the Georgetown Programming Board, and other groups.

Current and Former Senate Leadership
Senate Speaker Vice Speaker
19th Senate Nov. Session

(Nov 2023 - Apr 2024)

Megan Skinner Dylan Davis
18th Senate Apr. Session

(Apr 2023 - Nov 2023)

Manahal Fazal Joshua Bernard-Pearl

Megan Skinner

18th Senate Nov. Session

(Nov 2022 - Apr 2023)

Manahal Fazal Alicia Gopal
17th Senate Apr. Session

(Apr 2022 - Nov 2023)

Camber Vincent Spencer Woodall
17th Senate Nov. Session

(Nov 2021 - Apr 2022)

Leo Rassieur Rowlie Flores

The April session runs from April to November consisting of 22 representatives before the new incoming Freshmen class holds elections. The November session runs from November to April with all 29 representatives after elections are held for the Freshmen Class and At-Large senate seats. Leadership elections are held the first meeting following each election cycle.

Judicial Branch

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The Judicial Branch is made up of a 3-person Constitutional Council, which oversees all internal GUSA disputes and is charged with the stewardship of the GUSA Constitution.

Legacy

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Student government has been involved throughout its history in the establishment, expansion, and improvement of a plethora of student resources and services. This legacy includes the Georgetown University Transportation Shuttles (GUTS) system, which was founded in 1974 and expanded several times since then through the work of student government, and campus dining, whose improvement has been a focus of student government for decades. Other initiatives include:

  • The Georgetown University Lecture Fund, which was founded by Student Government in the 1970s and became an independent organization in 2005[6]
  • The GeorgetownOne Card (GoCard), in whose 2001 creation GUSA played a pivotal role[7]
  • The Collegiate Readership Program, a GUSA initiative which provided students with free copies of major newspapers from 2008 to 2015,[8] and 2023 onwards
  • The Summer Fellows program, which was founded by GUSA in 2009 and now provides free on-campus summer housing to low-income students under the auspices of the Georgetown Scholarship Program (GSP)[9]
    • Currently known as the Summer BRIDGE Housing Program from 2023 onwards
  • The Student Advocacy Office (SAO), which was founded by GUSA in 2012 and continues to provide assistance to students navigating the university's disciplinary systems[10]
  • The Georgetown University Farmer's Market, which was organized by GUSA in 2018 and continues under its own board every Wednesday during the school year
  • The Georgetown Student Mental Health Fund, which was organized by GUSA in 2018 with an initial contribution from GUSA, the Student Affairs Office, and an anonymous donor, helps fund students who are referred to off campus specialists from the Counseling and Psychiatry Services, ongoing funding is being supported by the Division of Student Affairs
  • The Georgetown Disability Cultural Initiative, which welcomed its first Associate Director, Dr. Amy Kenny, in the summer of 2022 and later became the Disability Cultural Center in Fall 2023
  • Other notable groups that the Georgetown University Student Association has founded over its duration include:
    • Students Advocating for Food Equity (SAFE)
    • The Georgetown University Coalition for Worker's Rights (GUCWR)
    • Inter-Academic Council (InterAC)
    • The Hoya Hub


Perhaps the most famous service established by student government is Students of Georgetown, Inc., also known as "The Corp", which was founded by SG President Roger Cochetti and Vice President Nancy Kent in October 1971. Until the early 1990s, the board of The Corp remained under the control of student government and the activities of the two organizations were closely linked.[11]

In addition to improving student resources and services, student government at Georgetown has long played a central role in the allocation of resources to student activities. This has been the case since at least the 1970s, but a notable change occurred in 2001 when a GUSA-led effort successfully established a "Student Activities Fee" to be collected from all students as part of undergraduate tuition, and disbursed to all student organizations by GUSA itself. Today, GUSA allocates more than $1 million per year to eight advisory boards, which in turn allocate their funds to over 300 student organizations.[12]

Student government has traditionally remained focused on student life, but at times the organization has also contributed its voice to political debates on campus and around the country. In 1997, for example, GUSA vocally supported the controversial addition of crucifixes to university classrooms.[13] And in 2011, GUSA President Mike Meaney organized a group letter from more than 100 student body presidents to President Barack Obama and Speaker of the House John Boehner urging a bipartisan compromise on the national debt ceiling.[14]


History

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Georgetown University Athletic Association: 1874 to 1920

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The earliest form of student government at Georgetown was the Georgetown University Athletic Association, which formed in 1874 in order to coordinate athletics amongst the students of Georgetown College. The Athletic Association was relatively informal in its structure and duties until 1889, when students drafted a constitution and began annual elections. Its leadership consisted of three elected students –– the Vice President, Secretary, and Treasurer –– as well as the managers of each athletic team and a Jesuit advisor who held the symbolic title of "President". That symbolism was soon relinquished, however, and by 1900 the student leader of the Athletic Association was called its President. The Association's duties were almost entirely athletic in nature; it coordinated schedules for athletic practices and games, managed the sharing of athletic equipment, and raised funds in order to support activities related to athletics and school spirit.[15]

The Athletic Association was also called "The Yard" interchangeably, in likely reference to the College Yard in which athletic games were played. Its annual leaders were thus referred to as the Yard President, Yard Secretary, and Yard Treasurer.

The 3 Student Councils: 1920 to 1969

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In 1920, a College Student Council was formed with representatives from each class year. The Athletic Association continued to exist for the limited purpose of coordinating athletics, but the College Student Council supplanted it as the most important and authoritative elected body of the College and thus assumed the title "The Yard". Unlike the Athletic Association, the Student Council's duties were wide-ranging, including advocacy for student interests and the coordination of social life in the College. Students in the College continued to elect three executives each year –– the Yard President, Yard Secretary, and Yard Treasurer –– who oversaw both the old Athletic Association and the new College Student Council.

In 1940, the students of Georgetown College approved a new constitution for the College Student Council which included representation for the College's most significant student organizations alongside the representatives of each class. Over the next thirty years, the organizations represented on the Council would include the Georgetown College Journal, the Collegiate Club, the Glee Club, The Hoya, the International Relations Club, Mask and Bauble, the Philodemic Society, the Sodality, the Washington Club, and WGTB Radio.[16]

Around the same time that the College Student Council was formed in 1920, the students of the newly-established School of Foreign Service (SFS) founded an SFS Student Council. Like its original College counterpart, the SFS Student Council included representatives from each class year as well as the whole school and took on a variety of responsibilities including advocacy and social life. When the School of Languages and Linguistics was founded in 1949 and the School of Business in 1957, their student bodies were incorporated into the SFS Student Council's representative infrastructure. By the early 1960s, the group was called the "East Campus Student Council" or "Walsh Area Student Council" to reflect the fact that its constituency now included three undergraduate schools but that all three schools were located on Georgetown's "East Campus" (the block between 35th and 36th Streets NW, on which the Walsh Building stands).

At some point in the 1940s or 50s, the students of the Nursing School founded the Nursing School Student Council, which, like its SFS counterpart, included class representatives and school-wide elected officers but not representatives of student organizations. The first women to hold elected office in student government at Georgetown did so on the Nursing School Student Council, since the school was originally open only to women.

Administrative collaboration and social interaction between Georgetown's five separate undergraduate schools began to increase in the 1950s and 60s, and by the mid-60s there was an unprecedented sense of shared community amongst students of the five schools. Students also began to recognize the practical benefits of university-wide collaboration on the issues that affected students in all schools equally. As a result, several attempts were made throughout the 1960s to unify the three disparate student councils. Unification efforts were finally successful in March 1968, when a referendum passed among the constituencies of all three student councils. In December 1968, students from all schools elected 40 delegates to a constitutional convention, which was charged with drafting a structure for the new, unified student government. The convention released its plans within a few months, and the first university-wide student government election was held in May 1969.[17]

Student Government (SG): 1969 to 1984

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Simply called the Student Government (SG), the new unified institution included a President and Vice President elected by the entire student body, and a Senate with 5 students elected from each school and 5 from each class (40 in total).[17]

Georgetown University Student Association (GUSA): 1984 to present

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In 1984, students replaced the SG with the Georgetown University Student Association (GUSA), a new institution that over time came to be loosely based on the tripartite structure of the federal government of the United States. GUSA's executive branch included a President and Vice President, elected annually by the student body. Its legislative branch consisted of a 16-person Assembly, with 4 representatives from each class year––thus eliminating the last vestiges of differentiated representation for the five schools. After 1990, GUSA also had a judicial branch, consisting of a 3-person Constitutional Council empowered to resolve constitutional disputes within the student government.

The GUSA Constitution has been amended three times:

  • In March 1990, students replaced the original GUSA Constitution with a shorter, more streamlined document. They also created a Constitutional Council.[18]
  • In October 2006, students replaced the Assembly with the Senate, a larger body made up of representatives from geographic districts across Georgetown's campus.[19]
  • In February 2018, students voted to maintain the Senate's larger size but return it to a system of representation based on class year, rather than geography.[20]

Notable alumni

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U.S. President Bill Clinton ran for the presidency of the East Campus Student Council in spring 1967 (his junior year), but lost to Terrence Modglin. This flyer advertised his candidacy.

Many notable individuals in business, politics, religion, and the arts began their careers in Georgetown's student government, including:

GU-Qatar Student Government Association (GU-Q SGA)

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Georgetown University in Qatar-Student Government Association
AbbreviationGU-Q SGA
President
Nagla Abdelhady (SFS '25)
Vice President
Ahmed Noeman (SFS '27)
Chief of Staff
Sama Alissa (SFS '27)
Public Relations Officer
Haya Al-Mannai (SFS '27)

The Georgetown University in Qatar-Student Government Association (GU-Q SGA) is an annually elected, student-run governance association that works to represent the student body of Georgetown University in Qatar and liaise with university administrators. In addition, The President of SGA chairs the Student Liaison Commission (SLC), and The Vice President chairs the Student Activities Commission (SAC).[21] The SGA has 11 members, replaced annually. An executive group made up of the President, the Vice President, and the Public Relations Officer guide and preside over the functions of the SGA. A core group of 8 members represents the interests of the student body, with two representatives from each undergraduate class. The SGA meets on a weekly basis and discusses the issues or concerns raised by the student body. The President is also a member of the Dean's subcommittees for various issues such as the Dean's subcommittee for sustainability. The introduction of the Red Square, a replica of the famous Red Square in Georgetown University's main campus in Washington D.C., was a result of an initiative of the SGA led by President Malak Elmoh (SFS-Q '21).[22]

Sheikh Mohammed bin Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani (SFS-Q '09), the first President of the SGA was elected in 2006. The official title of the President was changed to Student Body President and Head of SGA, as per the Fourth Amendment to the GU-Q SGA Constitution which was signed and approved by President Kurian in April 5,2023.

The former Presidents of the Student Government Association include,

List of the Presidents of the SGA
Year Name
2006-2007 Mohammed bin Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani
2007-2008 Hanouf Al Buainain
2008-2009 Asma Al Addawi
2009-2010 Hadi Darwishi
2010-2011 Zainab El Fil
2011-2013 William YangUn Cha
2013-2014 Mohamed Sirelkhatim
2014-2015 Yoonsuk Choi
2015-2016 Abdullah Ahmad
2016-2017 Dialla Jandali
2017-2018 Noor Sheikh
2018-2019 Malak Elmoh
2019-2020 Abdullah Al-Malki
2020-2021 Mariam Kvaratskhelia
2021-2022 Maryam Al-Khater
2022-2023 Benjamin Kurian
List of Student Body Presidents and Head of SGA
Year Name
2022-2023 Benjamin Kurian
May 2023-December 2023 Mohammed Jaski
January 2024-May 2024 Maryam Al-Ansari
2024-Present Nagla Abdelhady

The Senate of GU-Q SGA is made up of two class representatives from each batch at GU-Q. They work alongside the SGA President and the executive board to accomplish and meet the student needs. Apart from representing students within GUQ, the SGA also represents them in the Education City Student Government Association(ECSGA),an initiative started by President Hadi Darvishi in 2009 combining the Student Governments of various universities in Education City. In 2022, under the leadership of President Kurian, GU-Q SGA hosted a meeting of the ECSGA at Georgetown University in Qatar. This was the first meeting of ECSGA after four years. GU-Q SGA also holds strong connections with Georgetown University Student Association(GUSA) and Georgetown University Graduate Student Government (GradGov),as part of the ‘One Georgetown’ initiative by President Kurian. [23]

In 2024, under the leadership of President Abdelhady (then Chief of Staff), GU-Q SGA established an Academic Council with cooperation from their counterparts in Washington D.C.

President Kvaratskhelia was selected as the student speaker for the Georgetown University MSFS Commencement exercises in 2024.

SGA Senate 2022-23
Title Name
Class Representative of 2023 Rodolfo Muños Cárdenas

Muhammad Carter

Class Representative of 2024 Juan Carlo Landayan

Ilgar Gapagov

Class Representative of 2025 Gaebriel Olsen

Aamna Asim

Class Representative of 2026 Kim Chen

Maryam Al-Ansari

SGA Senate 2023-24
Title Name
Class Representative of 2024 Juan Carlo Landayan

Noha Alhamid

Class Representative of 2025 Alexander Sandner

Mohammad Hannon

Class Representative of 2026 Kayan Al-Mousawi

Tashafee Masoodi

Class Representative of 2027 Hassan Amin

Haya Al-Mannai

References

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  1. ^ "GUSA Bylaws". Georgetown University Student Association.
  2. ^ "Georgetown University Student Association: About". Georgetown University. 2007. Retrieved 2008-03-10.
  3. ^ "Georgetown University Student Association: External Boards". Georgetown University. 2008. Archived from the original on 2011-07-19. Retrieved 2008-03-10.
  4. ^ "Georgetown University Student Association: Constitution". Georgetown University. 2007. Archived from the original on 2010-06-29. Retrieved 2008-03-10.
  5. ^ "Undergraduate". studentaccounts.georgetown.edu. Retrieved 2018-07-25.
  6. ^ Santulli, Stephen (February 25, 2005). "GUSA Assembly Grants Lecture Fund Liberation". The Hoya.
  7. ^ Keller, Caroline (September 28, 2001). "STUDENT LIFE GU One Card Planned To Start Next Semester". The Hoya. Retrieved 2008-04-22.[permanent dead link]
  8. ^ McLennon, Maddie (February 9, 2010). "Readership Program Back, Snow Poses No Obstacle". The Hoya.
  9. ^ Talbot, Adam (February 10, 2011). "New Candidates Must Build on Past GUSA Successes". The Hoya.
  10. ^ "Student Advocacy Office". Georgetown University Student Association.
  11. ^ The Corp. "History". Retrieved 14 December 2023.
  12. ^ "Student Activities Budget Report, Fiscal Year 18". Georgetown University Student Association. March 2018.
  13. ^ Hansen, Ronald J. (November 21, 1997). "Georgetown debate angers D.C. cardinal: Hickey chides university on crucifixes". The Washington Times. Retrieved 2008-03-24.
  14. ^ Rosenthal, Brian M. (July 21, 2011). "Student body presidents urge political leaders to reach compromise on debt debate". The Washington Post. Retrieved March 13, 2013.
  15. ^ Curran, Robert Emmett (2010). A History of Georgetown University. Georgetown University Press. ISBN 978-1589016910.
  16. ^ "Preliminary Sketch of New Georgetown Constitution". The Hoya. November 20, 1946.
  17. ^ a b Durkin, Joseph (1990). Swift Potomac's Lovely Daughter: Two Centuries at Georgetown through Students' Eyes. Georgetown University Press. pp. 203–214. ISBN 978-0-87840-501-5.
  18. ^ Stewart, Mike (March 23, 2006). "Fixing what's broken". The Georgetown Voice. Retrieved 2008-03-10.
  19. ^ Murchison, Twister (November 14, 2006). "Fall Brings Winds of Change for GUSA". The Hoya. Retrieved 2008-03-10.[permanent dead link]
  20. ^ Ash, Elizabeth (February 27, 2018). "GUSA Senate Confirms Election Results". The Hoya.
  21. ^ "Student Government Association". Georgetown University in Qatar.
  22. ^ "Georgetown in Qatar Ranks Poorly on Free Speech". The Hoya.
  23. ^ "A Seat At the Table: TGG's Editorial Board Interviews SGA President". The Georgetown Gazette.
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