Yet Anoth­er Uni­ver­si­ty Dou­bles Down On Diver­si­ty Com­mit­ments Despite SCOTUS Rul­ing

Yet Another University Doubles Down On Diversity Commitments Despite SCOTUS Ruling

Brown Uni­ver­si­ty announced on Wednes­day its plan to increase diver­si­ty on cam­pus despite the Supreme Court’s rul­ing ban­ning affir­ma­tive action admis­sion prac­tices.

The school fol­lows in the Uni­ver­si­ty of Cal­i­for­nia, Los Ange­les’ (UCLA) foot­steps, which pub­li­cized its attempts to skirt the Court’s rul­ing in ways that may open it up to law­suits, some experts believe. Brown’s meth­ods include sta­tion­ing recruit­ment offi­cers across the coun­try, acti­vat­ing the university’s alum­ni net­work for out­reach efforts and cre­at­ing “tar­get­ed com­mu­ni­ca­tions cam­paigns,” accord­ing to a news release.

“In the wake of the U.S. Supreme Court deci­sion that great­ly lim­it­ed any con­sid­er­a­tion of race in admis­sion deci­sions, Brown remains com­mit­ted to com­ply­ing with the law while fos­ter­ing a diverse and inclu­sive com­mu­ni­ty as inte­gral to our mis­sion of aca­d­e­m­ic excel­lence,” provost Fran­cis J. Doyle III and inter­im vice pres­i­dent for Insti­tu­tion­al Equi­ty and Diver­si­ty Patri­cia Poite­vien wrote in a state­ment. “With a focus on recruit­ment, matric­u­la­tion and reten­tion of a diverse com­mu­ni­ty of stu­dents, the Uni­ver­si­ty has devel­oped a set of con­crete actions focused on ensur­ing a robust pool of high­ly qual­i­fied diverse stu­dents apply to Brown and, once admit­ted, have access to the resources they need to enroll.”

The Supreme Court in 2023 ruled affir­ma­tive action admis­sion poli­cies to be uncon­sti­tu­tion­al after the Stu­dents for Fair Admis­sions accused them of unfair­ly dis­crim­i­nat­ing against Asian stu­dents, an argu­ment that was sub­stan­ti­at­ed when Asian enroll­ment at Brown and many oth­er uni­ver­si­ties sig­nif­i­cant­ly increased in the first year fol­low­ing the ban. Asian stu­dents made up approx­i­mate­ly 33% of Brown’s stu­dent body in 2024 com­pared to 29% in 2023.

UCLA announced its method of side­step­ping the Court’s rul­ing short­ly after the deci­sion, which includ­ed many of the meth­ods Brown now boasts. These diver­si­ty-manip­u­lat­ing strate­gies came under fire for poten­tial­ly vio­lat­ing the law, which some experts who spoke with the Dai­ly Caller News Foun­da­tion believe may open the school up to law­suits and make it a “prime tar­get” for the incom­ing Trump Administration’s Depart­ment of Jus­tice. (RELATED: UCLA’s Blue­print To Increase Diver­si­ty And Side­step SCOTUS Rul­ing Could Make It ‘Prime Tar­get’ For Trump DOJ)

Sev­er­al uni­ver­si­ties’ com­pli­ance with the affir­ma­tive action rul­ing have already been called into ques­tion after Yale, Prince­ton and Duke report­ed lit­tle to no changes to the stu­dent demo­graph­ics of their incom­ing class­es, sug­gest­ing the schools may still be ille­gal­ly racial­ly ger­ry­man­der­ing their stu­dent body.

Brown did not imme­di­ate­ly respond to the Dai­ly Caller News Foundation’s request for com­ment.

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