campusreform | Amid nationwide calls for more diversity initiatives at universities,
one professor argues that these types of programs fail to address the
real issues and ultimately harm minority students.
In a recent interview, Henry Louis Taylor Jr., professor
of urban and regional planning at the University of Buffalo, said the
focus on “inclusion and diversity” on college campuses has been an
excuse to avoid any actual confrontation of race issues. Taylor says
that the primary issue of the century is race, and argues that society
needs to bring more attention to how different organizations handle
issues of race and racism.
He says this should be done by bringing these topics to the forefront.
According
to Taylor, universities have “replaced conversations around race with
conversations around inclusion and diversity, which shifts the
conversation and issue away so that we don’t have to deal with all of
those complex issues that are related to grappling and dealing with
race."
Taylor claims that the move toward “inclusion and
diversity” at universities “has been nothing more than a smokescreen to
marginalize the discussions of race and, in particular, the issues
facing African Americans."
“There are these predominantly white
science departments and medical centers that years later still have no
or very few black folks or Puerto Ricans,” said Taylor. “And this is one
of the reasons the anger is so deep." Taylor states that as a result of
the current situations, people are having their voices be heard by
bodies of government. The spread of the coronavirus and the recent
protests have us “caught in this kind of purgatory” by showing all
“people across the racial divide...the commonalities of pain and
misery."
According to the professor, the coronavirus crisis created the perfect storm for the types of change he believes is necessary.
“COVID-19
has snatched the mask off of America the beautiful, and revealed
disfigurement as a characteristic of this country,” said Taylor. “It’s
created a common experience of people across the racial divide that
allowed them to see the commonalities of pain and misery.
“So we
won’t go back to the old world. We have a vision, that’s what they’re
talking about — saying that enough is enough,” he explained
Taylor told Campus Reform
that certain university diversity efforts have increased enrollment of
international students on college campuses, there has been an unnoticed
decrease of black students.
“The inclusion and diversity
framework, in practice, pushed issues concerning black and brown people
to the margin as they became increasingly abstract. In some places,
people were even calling for ideological diversity,” Taylor told Campus Reform.
Taylor
added that college campuses’ diversity efforts actually harm the very
people they are meant to aid, saying that “the rise of international
students made it easier to hide the disappearance of Blacks on college
campuses, along with Latinxs.”
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