A growing number of US public universities are taking steps towards ending scholarships aimed at helping racial minorities, making what their advocates see as an erroneous, harmful and politically driven interpretation of the Supreme Court鈥檚 ban on affirmative action.
In the latest major move in that direction, at least seven universities in Ohio began reviewing their scholarships after the state鈥檚 Republican attorney general, Dave Yost, warned them in recent weeks that such an assessment should be a part of complying with the US Supreme Court鈥檚 ruling.
Public institutions in Texas, Illinois, Missouri and Alabama, as well as the private Boston University, also appear to have responded to the court鈥檚 ruling by eliminating at least some scholarships meant to benefit racial minorities.
And that list is expected to expand further, as partisan activists keep up pressure, said James Murphy, director of career pathways and postsecondary policy at the advocacy group Education Reform Now. 鈥淚 expect more to come,鈥 he said.
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The Supreme Court, after gaining a majority of conservative justices in the Trump administration,聽ruled in June 2023聽鈥 in cases involving Harvard University and the University of North Carolina 鈥 to overturn decades of precedent that had allowed racial preferences in admissions decisions.
Some conservative activists and policymakers quickly suggested聽wider implications聽of the Supreme Court鈥檚 logic for higher education, including the question of scholarships that benefit members of specific racial minorities.
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And the activist who organised the cases against Harvard and UNC, Edward Blum, said he planned to begin investigations of cases where US colleges and universities made race-based distinctions in their financial aid packages.
鈥淓xcluding individuals by race or ethnicity in awarding financial aid, scholarships, internships and fellowships is gravely unfair and illegal. All institutions of higher education should end these discriminatory practices immediately,鈥 Mr Blum said.
The actual number of colleges and universities retreating on scholarships is difficult to track nationally, Dr Murphy said, 鈥渂ecause most of them are not loudly advertising it鈥.
A spokeswoman for Ohio University acknowledged that her 28,000-student institution聽was acting on the state attorney general鈥檚 request.
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鈥淥hio University is working to complete a review of a small but important subset of gift agreements to determine which can proceed without language changes and which gift agreements may require a conversation with the donors regarding the implementation of revisions,鈥 the spokeswoman said.
The University of Missouri took similar action shortly after the Supreme Court ruling, ending its minority scholarships under prodding by its Republican state attorney general.
The Biden administration, meanwhile, has been telling US institutions that such premises聽are mistaken. The administration聽was correct, Dr Murphy said, because the Supreme Court鈥檚 ruling against Harvard and UNC 鈥渨as very limited in scope鈥, applying only to the consideration of race in admissions as practised by those two institutions.
And the opinion 鈥渘ever once uses the phrase 鈥榓ffirmative action鈥 and it does not discuss financial aid, recruitment strategies, DEI or really anything else but the consideration of racial identity in the admissions process鈥, he said.
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Yet, Dr Murphy said, 鈥渋t took less than an hour for some bad actors to wilfully misinterpret the decision to extend to a range of legal practices never discussed by the court鈥.
In cases where institutions聽were voluntarily eliminating race-based scholarships, that appeared to be a decision made by their legal counsels, 鈥渂ased on fear, rather than by leadership, based on mission鈥, he said.
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