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Feb 10 31 tweets 6 min read Read on X
SCOOP: The University of Illinois was sued today over a slew of race-based hiring programs that discriminate against white scholars.

The lawsuit shows how faculty hiring—and the paper trail it generates—could be an easy way for the Trump administration to go after DEI.🧵 Image
The plaintiff, Stephen Kleinschmit, a former professor of public administration and data science at the University of Illinois Chicago, alleges that he was fired for raising concerns about the programs.
The initiatives include "racial equity" plans that call on departments to "hire three [people of color]" and a separate program run by UIC’s diversity office that funds the recruitment of "underrepresented" scholars.
To apply for those funds, departments must describe their DEI goals and what’s been done to achieve them. The result is a long paper trail of applications—first reported by the Washington Free Beacon—in which departments openly pledge to discriminate based on race. Image
Such statements form the backbone of Kleinschmit’s complaint, which argues his firing was both a form of retaliation and race discrimination.
Though UIC claimed he was being fired due to budget cuts—which did not result in any other layoffs—those cuts came as his department was seeking to hire a scholar "from a community of color."
The lawsuit is the latest example of a public university facing blowback for its discriminatory employment practices. CU Boulder paused a "critical needs" hiring program last month after documents surfaced showing the school's race-based hiring:
Similar documents have been unearthed at the University of Washington, Ohio State, and Vanderbilt University Medical Center. At the University of New Mexico, one professor wrote in an email, "I don’t want to hire white men for sure."
College admissions have also been the subject of discrimination complaints, but those cases can be difficult to win because student privacy laws shield admissions files from public disclosure, forcing plaintiffs to rely on statistical evidence.
"Admissions decisions are an opaque morass at their best," said Dan Morenoff, the head of the American Civil Rights Project. "Proving discrimination requires intensive econometric analysis by experts and only 2-3 law firms have ever successfully litigated that discrimination."
The faculty hiring process, on the other hand, tends to produce a paper trail that is accessible through litigation and, at public universities, subject to public records requests.
That could make programs like UIC’s easy pickings for private litigants and federal agencies amid the legal siege promised by the Trump administration, which has issued a series of executive orders targeting universities and DEI.
"Plaintiffs should have a much easier time proving universities are violating Title VII in their hiring policies than they would have proving Title VI violations in admissions," Morenoff said. "The evidence will not be hard to find."
At UIC, all departments are required to submit "advancing racial equity" plans to the school’s DEI office, which in 2020 released a set of templates for what those plans should look like.
The templates instruct departments to set hard racial quotas—"hire at least 3 new tenure-track faculty of color," for example—and to submit progress reports on the steps being taken to meet them.
In one such report, dated October 2023, UIC’s College of Applied Health Sciences wrote that it had hired "2 more faculty and 1 staff of color" over the previous year.
"By the fall of 2024 we will have two additional faculty of color in the department (e.g., AA/PI, NA/AI, Black, and/or Latinx)," the report said. Image
In another report, UIC’s Global Asian Studies program pledged to hire "at least three new additional faculty … who represent diverse identities." Image
The university has also incentivized race-based hiring through its Bridge to Faculty program, which provides money to departments to hire "underrepresented" scholars.
Because that money comes out of UIC’s central budget—not each department’s own coffers—the program is the only way for some departments to afford new hires, according to the lawsuit, forcing them to double down on DEI if they wish to remain competitive.
In applications reviewed by the Free Beacon, departments disparaged "White Masculinity," called for "additional BIPOC/female/nonbinary faculty," and claimed it would be "immoral" to recruit "underrepresented graduate students" without hiring more professors who "look like them."
Several also stated that they would target faculty with a focus on activist scholarship. The math department said it wanted a scholar of "race and power in undergraduate mathematics education," for example.
And the biomedical engineering department, which received funding through the program, said that its ideal candidate would "train the next generation of Biomedical Engineers in DEI principles."
These initiatives had an extraordinary effect on the racial makeup of UIC’s faculty. Between 2019 and 2023, the # of black and Hispanic tenure track professors rose by over 25%, according to data from the school, while the number of white tenure-track professors declined by 4%.
Soon enough, Kleinschmit began hearing from his colleagues that some of the new hires were not up to snuff. It was "demoralizing," he told the Free Beacon, to see unqualified scholars fast-tracked for tenure because of their race.
In the fall of 2022, Kleinschmit began airing these concerns to top university officials, including UIC provost Karen Colley and the dean of the College of Urban Planning and Public Affairs, Stacey Swearingen-White. By February 2023, he had been informed of his impending layoff.
Swearingen-White told him in a meeting that his contract would not be renewed because of budget cuts. But at the same time that those cuts were allegedly being made, the college found the money to hire a series of new administrators, according to the lawsuit.
The college aslo received funding through the Bridge to Faculty program to recruit a minority scholar. And Kleinschmit was the only member of the college who was ultimately let go.
"The Plaintiff repeatedly and thoroughly highlighted the discriminatory nature of the university’s conduct, making him a target of retaliation," the lawsuit reads.
"If Professor Kleinschmit were a member of one of the preferred racial groups, the administration would have quickly found the resources to support his continued employment."
Tldr: University of Illinois Chicago is being sued after nearly program at the school stated, in writing, that it planned to hired based on race.

Read the full story, including a link to the complaint, here: freebeacon.com/campus/univers…

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More from @aaronsibarium

Feb 8
SCOOP: The Department of Education today canceled $15 million in federal grants that were used to fund diversity programs at three universities, the latest move in the Trump administration's efforts to defund DEI.

The grants were spent on DEI trainings and an “equity” center.🧵
The universities—California State University, Los Angeles; Virginia Commonwealth University; and the University of St. Thomas in Minnesota—had received a series of grants for their education schools under the Biden administration.
Ostensibly meant for teacher training and development, the grants were in fact used to support courses and workshops on DEI concepts, including "white privilege," "systemic racism," and "linguistic supremacy.”
Read 6 tweets
Feb 4
SCOOP: Brown University Medical School now gives "diversity, equity, and inclusion" more weight than "excellent clinical skills" in its promotion criteria for faculty."

The criteria say DEI is a "major criterion." Clinical skills, by contrast, are only a "minor criterion."🧵 Image
Doctors who reviewed the criteria were alarmed, saying they reflect an unusually frank admission that merit is taking a back seat to DEI.

"This is as stark as it gets," said Bob Cirincione, an orthopedic surgeon in Hagerstown, Maryland.
The criteria "say what DEI in medical schools is all about. And it’s not about clinical performance."
Read 9 tweets
Jan 22
NEW: Many states and cities now have bias reporting systems for citizens to report each other for "hate speech."

Oregon's hotline solicits reports of "offensive jokes" and even logged the Israeli flag as a bias incident when I reported a display of one.

Wokeness is not dead.🧵
In the name of collecting "data" on so-called "bias incidents," at least a dozen Democratic jurisdictions, including eight states, have set up hotlines and portals that let people report their fellow citizens for protected speech. freebeacon.com/policy/inside-…
The systems resemble the bias response teams commonplace on college campuses, which allow students to report each other, anonymously and without verification, for ideological faux pas. What sets the state-run systems apart are their ties to law enforcement.
Read 71 tweets
Jan 16
EXCLUSIVE: Amy Wax has sued the University of Pennsylvania for race discrimination, arguing that Penn punishes speech that offends racial minorities but not speech that offends Jews.

Here is a table from the complaint, which was filed in federal court this morning.🧵 Image
The complaint, obtained exclusively by the Washington Free Beacon, advances a novel legal theory that could have major implications for universities as they brace for the incoming Trump administration.
"Penn tolerated speech targeting Jews while punishing Professor Wax for speech about affirmative action and other racial topics," the lawsuit reads. "Race therefore was a but-for cause"—that is, a key motivation—"of the decision to discipline Plaintiff Wax."
Read 20 tweets
Dec 18, 2024
NEW: Amy Wax told UPenn last week that she will sue the university for race discrimination if it does not drop the sanctions against her.

She's arguing that by punishing speech that offends racial minorities—but not speech that offends Jews—Penn violated civil rights law.🧵 Image
Penn has until December 19 to "conclusively disavow" the penalties. "Should you fail to do so," her attorney wrote in a letter to Penn, "Professor Wax will file suit against the University."
Because Penn promises its professors academic freedom, the letter argues that the school breached its contract with Wax by punishing her for protected speech. It notes that Penn took no action against professors who spewed anti-Semitic bile after the October 7 attacks.
Read 8 tweets
Dec 9, 2024
NEW: The top neuropsychology organizations in North America may soon adopt training guidlines that call on clinicians to use "social justice frameworks," fight "systemic oppression," and pursue "equitable and just scientific knowledge."

Board certification is on the line.🧵 Image
The guidelines are the product of two years of meetings between the field’s main professional groups and could reshape the entire discipline.

Neuropsych is the branch of medicine that diagnoses brain injuries, including concussions, by administering tests of cognitive function.
In 2022, delegates from the field’s membership and credentialing organizations met in Minneapolis to draft a new set of guidelines, or "competencies," meant to guide neuropsychology education.

It was clear from the start that those guidelines would have an ideological bent.
Read 28 tweets

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