Dismantling DEI on campus is messy. Here’s how it looks at one university.

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For Amanda Garcia, the memories are still fresh.

An alum of the University of Texas at Austin, she recalls how her campus changed after a state law dismantled diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) initiatives.

“We didn’t expect it to go as far as it did,” she says, sitting in a café near the capitol building remembering January 2024. “When the Multicultural Engagement Center shut down, as soon as the news broke, the next day there was somebody literally scraping letters off of the wall,” Ms. Garcia says.

Why We Wrote This

The Trump administration has made ridding U.S. college campuses of diversity, equity, and inclusion a top priority. What can be learned from a university in Texas, where a state DEI ban is already in place?

Even before the Trump administration started pressuring schools to get rid of DEI initiatives, red states were enacting laws to do so. Texas is one of at least 11 states, including Florida, Utah, and Iowa, with laws eliminating DEI efforts in higher education. How that process has unfurled there may hold lessons for colleges and universities across the United States.

Dismantling DEI programs has been messy. In recent weeks, after the U.S. Department of Education threatened to withhold federal funding if schools didn’t act, campus leaders have done everything from deleting references to DEI on websites to firing spokespeople. On Feb. 28, the deadline schools were given for making changes, Education Department officials offered clarification to some of their original language, including reinforcing that First Amendment rights shouldn’t be restricted. The constant stream of directives, some confusing, has colleges caught between politicians and the academic communities they serve.

In Texas, the law, Senate Bill 17, has been in effect since Jan. 1, 2024. Its rollout offers an example of how bans on DEI on campus can play out. Colleges and universities in the state have taken a range of actions to comply: shuttering DEI offices and firing staff, defunding programs and student clubs, getting rid of diversity training.

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