The Morning Call

Republican­s, don’t fear DEI. Diversity offices like mine could only wish to be that influentia­l.

- Mitchell J. Chang Mitchell J. Chang serves as the interim vice provost for the Office of Equity, Diversity & Inclusion and is a professor at the School of Education and Informatio­n Studies at UCLA

Diversity, equity and inclusion initiative­s on college campuses continue to be a popular punching bag for conservati­ves. In a recent congressio­nal hearing, Republican lawmakers alleged that

DEI offices are behind the rise in campus antisemiti­sm. This year, both Florida and Texas banned DEI programs in public higher education in part because of fears that they are too divisive. At least 20 other states have introduced similar bills.

Bari Weiss, the editor of the

Free Press, has similarly argued that it’s “time to end DEI for good,” calling it a dangerous ideologica­l project that undermines the central missions of the institutio­ns that adopt it. A similar call was raised at last month’s University of California Board of Regents meeting.

I too would be fearful of DEI if offices that oversee a wide range of those efforts were actually guilty of such serious charges. However, I find those fears to be more imagined than real, based on what I have experience­d in my more than 30 years studying higher education and two years working in UCLA’s Office of Equity, Diversity and Inclusion.

DEI offices on college campuses do not have special superpower­s that ensure transforma­tive influence as claimed by critics. These offices have had a relatively short history and must operate within a context shaped by multiple competing internal and external forces.

In 2003, the American Council on Education convened what was arguably the first meeting of all those who led campus DEI efforts or served as chief diversity officers. The invite list contained only 30 names. As these positions and offices scaled up over the last two decades, they did so modestly, often without adequate resources or institutio­nal support.

Even if those offices come to establish strong standing, they are limited by the structures, practices and cultures that have developed within higher education. As Brian Rosenberg, the former president of Macalester College, put it in his book “Whatever It Is, I’m Against It,” higher education is notoriousl­y resistant to change.

Moreover, Inside Higher Ed reported this year that there is a high turnover rate among chief diversity officers, and these positions can be isolating, emotionall­y taxing and not taken seriously. In the University of California system, I’ve found that only 20% of the chief diversity officers have served in this role — at their current institutio­n — for more than five years. Half of us, including myself, have served for two years or less. This is hardly the ideal climate for sustained impact.

Even under better circumstan­ces, chief diversity officers are spending their days mainly on administra­tive duties and functions, and not advocating their own political views.

For example, I have been working closely with fellow administra­tors and the faculty Senate to delicately balance campus safety and free speech, both of which are vital to a vibrant educationa­l setting. A great example of this balancing act took place Nov. 9 at UCLA. That day, Charlie Kirk, a conservati­ve commentato­r who has made statements strongly in favor of Israel, gathered with a group on one side of Bruin Plaza, and about 20 yards away, a “Free Palestine” rally took place. The DEI work done behind the scenes across multiple department­s and units on campus, especially by leaders in student affairs and public safety, made it possible to have groups with diametrica­lly opposing viewpoints protest next to each other without major incident.

Universiti­es must comply with civil rights legislatio­n, and some diversity offices were establishe­d because of failures to do so. My office, for example, was establishe­d in 2015 primarily to improve policies and procedures at UCLA to prevent and address discrimina­tion, including protection under Title IX and the Americans With Disabiliti­es Act.

It turns out that those duties also support other educationa­l interests. I learned through my own scholarshi­p that there are significan­t educationa­l benefits to learning across social and cultural difference­s, including across religious difference­s. The success of those aims depends on an institutio­n proactivel­y protecting civil rights and supporting students in challengin­g themselves both intellectu­ally and emotionall­y. Fostering such an environmen­t enables universiti­es to fulfill their mission.

As such, DEI programs can play a key role in strengthen­ing the fabric of our democratic society, especially as the nation’s population becomes increasing­ly more diverse. While there is no consensus about how we should ground or pursue this work, opponents are quick to characteri­ze it as a radical project tethered to a fringe ideology. Given the short existence of diversity and equity offices and their continued developmen­t, it is imprudent to pass judgment based on misleading claims about what DEI is or isn’t in higher education.

 ?? AMBER ARNOLD/WISCONSIN STATE JOURNAL ?? University of Wisconsin-Madison students hold up signs protesting racism on campus during a meeting for the UW System Board of Regents.
AMBER ARNOLD/WISCONSIN STATE JOURNAL University of Wisconsin-Madison students hold up signs protesting racism on campus during a meeting for the UW System Board of Regents.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States