In the 2019-20 school year, when students at Tennessee’s Vanderbilt University crafted and urged official passage of a statement acknowledging that the school lay on former native lands in Nashville, they thought it would be an easy ask.

Acknowledging the Indigenous peoples to whom the land once belonged would be the first, and easiest, step toward measures serving the school’s existing Indigenous community, they thought. They were wrong.

“It always mystified me why there was not more support,” said McKalee Steen, a member of Oklahoma’s Cherokee Nation who as then-co-president of Vanderbilt’s Indigenous student group helped craft the statement put before the faculty senate. “This is one of the easiest things you can do.”

Instead, that campaign and subsequent attempts by student advocates have repeatedly failed without support from Chancellor Daniel Diermeier, who “has effectively squashed those efforts,” said junior Annabelle Littlejohn-Bailey, the Indigenous Scholars Organization’s current co-president.

What is a land acknowledgment?  

Despite broad student, faculty and community support, students say Diermeier has expressed vague legal concerns about issuing such a statement, “but seeing as how no legal harm has come of any other institution to do so, we don’t believe this to be a good-faith argument,” said senior Jayce Pollard, a Vanderbilt student government senator who has advocated for the issue.

Vanderbilt’s chancellor’s office did not respond to a request for comment.

Land acknowledgment statements recognize the peoples who historically populated and cared for the land now occupied by U.S. institutions like Vanderbilt. Such statements have been increasingly adopted by entities nationwide, including the Microsoft Corporation, NAFSA: Association of International Educators and the city council in San Jose, California.

Multiple institutions of higher education have also issued official statements, including Syracuse University, the University of North Dakota, Texas Christian University and Kalamazoo College.

What passed in the Vanderbilt student senate? 

At Vanderbilt, the statement passed in the student senate reads: