Arizona's Public Universities Drop Controversial DEI Statements for Job Applicants
It may be part of a larger reassessment of subjecting all areas of life to ideological tests.

Have we hit the high-water mark of social-justice loyalty pledges? The signs are encouraging for those of us who prefer to move through life without declaring fealty to political ideologies. Mandatory diversity, equity, and inclusion statements (DEI), which have become increasingly de rigueur political litmus tests for hiring at academic institutions, suffered a significant setback last week when Arizona's public universities unceremoniously dumped their use going forward.
"The Arizona Board of Regents said Tuesday the state's public universities have dropped the use of diversity, equity and inclusion statements in job applications," Ray Stern of The Arizona Republic reported on August 8. "In statements to The Arizona Republic, spokespeople from the Board of Regents, which oversees the university system, and Arizona State University said that 'DEI statements' were 'never' required. However, examples of job postings shows this is not true."
"Not true" nicely summarizes matters. Arizona's Goldwater Institute issued a report earlier this year which found extensive use of DEI statements at the state's universities.
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DEI Requirements—Widespread and Controversial
"As of fall 2022, Arizona's public universities now mandate diversity statements from applicants in over a quarter (28%) of job postings at the University of Arizona, nearly three-quarters (73%) of job postings at Northern Arizona University, and in more than four of five (81%) job postings at Arizona State University," according to Goldwater's The New Loyalty Oaths: How Arizona's Public Universities Compel Job Applicants to Endorse Progressive Politics, published in January. The report added that "Arizona's universities appear to be using DEI statements in an attempt to circumvent the state's constitutional prohibition against political litmus tests in public educational institutions."
DEI statements are controversial because they're widely seen as intended to screen out those not committed to progressive politics. "Vague or ideologically motivated DEI statement policies can too easily function as litmus tests for adherence to prevailing ideological views on DEI, penalize faculty for holding dissenting opinions on matters of public concern, and 'cast a pall of orthodoxy' over the campus," cautions the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression.
For example, the University of California, Berkeley's DEI scoring "punishes any candidate who expresses a dislike for race-conscious policies," according to John Sailer of the National Association of Scholars. Western Oregon University looks for an explicit commitment to "advancing racial equity and eliminating systemic racism."
By contrast, maintaining a culture that encourages open discussion and a range of ideas played a center role on July 31 at the annual meeting of the Arizona Board of Regents' Committee on Free Expression.
"All three of Arizona's public universities maintain the highest green light rating from the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression (FIRE), recognizing the commitment of the board and the universities to free speech," the committee's draft report boasts. "Furthermore, all three universities have adopted the Chicago Statement, the free speech policy statement produced by the Committee on Freedom of Expression at the University of Chicago."
The report detailed free speech activities (and a few controversies) on the campuses of Arizona State University, Northern Arizona University, and the University of Arizona. All three institutions committed themselves to diversity of thought and institutional neutrality regarding speech.
Within the next week, the Board of Regents dropped requirements for DEI statements in hiring.
"The use of DEI statements has never been required by ABOR or Arizona public university policy but some university departments have requested statements in job postings," Sarah Harper, vice president of communications for the Arizona Board of Regents, told me by email. "After reviewing the Goldwater report, the Regents and the university presidents discussed ways to improve our human resource practices in this area and the presidents are taking steps to make those improvements."
"This is a huge victory for academic freedom and the First Amendment," Goldwater Institute President Victor Riches said as the organization took an earned victory lap. "The Goldwater Institute is continuing to show the nation how to defeat the destructive ideologies that are crippling colleges and universities."
Arizona Is in Good Company
Goldwater points to similar pushback against DEI policies at state universities in Missouri, North Carolina, and Texas where DEI statements have been dropped and related bureaucracies dismantled. Florida, unfortunately, has swung the pendulum too far in the other direction: State law doesn't just ban loyalty oaths but interferes in what professors can teach.
"The Florida Act abridges the First Amendment rights of a vast range of speakers—'woke' and otherwise—by interfering with university professors' ability to have honest and thorough classroom discussions with their students," argues UCLA law professor Eugene Volokh and several of his students in an amicus brief opposing Florida's Stop W.O.K.E. Act. "It chills discussions on speech that is directly related to course content. And the illusory supposed safe harbor for 'objective' speech cannot provide constitutionally adequate protection."
Still, ideological neutrality and Florida's overreaction taken together mark quite a change from what had become a growing tide of required DEI statements at the nation's institutions of higher education. A 2022 American Association of University Professors survey found that DEI criteria are included in consideration for tenure at 21.5 percent of colleges and universities and at 45.6 percent of large institutions of higher education. Even if some of that represents sincere efforts to promote diversity, equity, and inclusion rather than impose litmus tests, high-profile misuse of DEI statements creates an expectation on the part of academic job seekers that they must proclaim loyalty to a specific ideology in order to gain employment. Dropping DEI statements removes that pressure from the job market.
Ideological Litmus Tests Lose Favor Everywhere
As further evidence that ideological screening is losing favor, the ratings agency Standard & Poors is stepping back from similar considerations in the assessment of corporate creditworthiness.
"S&P Global will stop using alphanumeric ESG scores when assessing credit quality, an about-turn that comes amid a backlash against environmental, social, and governance investing," reports Barron's. "ESG investing has been under increasing scrutiny since last year, as conservative lawmakers and attorneys general claim that non-pecuniary considerations such as environmental and social issues would hurt investor returns."
And corporations are shedding their own DEI bureaucracies as they prove to be anything but the political insulation executives had sought, but instead become lightning rods for controversy.
"Companies including Netflix, Disney and Warner Bros. Discovery have recently said that high-profile diversity, equity and inclusion executives will be leaving their jobs," notes The Wall Street Journal. "Thousands of diversity-focused workers have been laid off since last year, and some companies are scaling back racial justice commitments."
Universities retreating from DEI statements appear to be part of a larger reassessment of the wisdom of subjecting all areas of life to one ideological group's view of how society should be viewed and reshaped.
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Reason's leading "anti-anti-CRT" commenter will be devastated. 🙁
#DiversityAboveAll
Sandra, I am so sorry to tell you that Buttplug is just another sock. Pretty much every lefty 'commenter' is just one, maybe two people. All that time you spent trolling buttplug was for not.
Pet peeve alert - the phrase is "was for naught."
Naught is a noun meaning nothingness. Not is an adverb.
Okay, red pencils down. I'll try to behave the rest of the day...
Between you and I, this English lesson won't be taken for granite.
Might want to be a bit more discrete with the comments.
or concrete.
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What about procrete?
That's knot write, is it?
I resemble that remark.
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Not can also be a noun. But we live in a world where men can get pregnant, so what do words really mean anymore.
https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/not
what are words for, when no one listens anymore?
Man, Dale Bozzio really did it for me as a teen.
That also reminds me how great MTV was in the early/mid 80s.
oh ya.
Alas, you're effort hear was in vein.
I never believed the person behind Buttplug was 100% sincere. Constantly bending over backwards in defense of a mediocrity like Joe Biden? There has to be an element of I'm just goofing around.
("Reason’s leading 'anti-anti-CRT' commenter" was a reference to chemjeff in case that wasn't clear.)
It turns out "chemjeff" which itself was a sock of the old commenter "cytotoxic" is being operated by the same account as Sarah Palin's Buttplug 2, AKA shrike, who has been a troll here since before there was account registration. You can find an inventory of the socks in this comment section.
I'd like to point out that I was 100% right on every account I've called out as being a shreek sock. However, I did not have cytotoxic/chemjeff pegged as the same person.
How did you determine that?
Ah, I see below, muting users. Clever.
Buttplug, through various handles over the years, has been quite consistent with his bullshit. Probably some handle swapping goes on, but I see a lot more than 2 distinct personalities in the lefty-ish commenters. I don't know why it's so hard to believe.
Interesting how the phrase "academic freedom" only comes up in this article in the 8th paragraph and then only in a quote from the Goldwater Institute spokesman, as opposed to its prominence in articles criticizing anti-Woke policies.
Biological male excessively proud to dominate women in powerlifting.
https://www.nationalreview.com/news/biological-male-dominates-canadian-womens-powerlifting-competition/
"Anne Andres, a biological male, competed in the women’s division of the Canadian Powerlifting Union’s Western Canadian Championship on Sunday and completely overpowered all other contestants. By the end of the tournament, Andres had lifted a total weight in excess of 400 pounds compared with the nearest challenger, SuJan Gill."
"The blowback did not phase Andres, who took to social media to boast. “I got every masters record and two unofficial world masters records,” the blue-haired bodybuilder wrote in an Instagram post on Monday. “I don’t care about records. I care about being there with my friends.”"
"The news drew the condemnation of Riley Gaines, a former NCAA swimmer, who has become an outspoken critic of allowing biological men to compete against women based on their gender identity. “Andres’ record is a mediocre lift by a mediocre male powerlifter because the Canadian powerlifting union is discriminating against female athletes,” the University of Kentucky alumna said beneath a caption condemning Canadian prime minister Justin Trudeau’s “radical disdain for women (and reality).”"
Shocking news, that men are stronger than women.
I am disappointed in that link. No pictures. How can I appropriately appreciate a "woman" without "objectifying" her?
Just imagine a barrel chested cutie with a lip full of skoal. Gives me shivers.
This is certainly progress. However, most of these problems go away if you allowed a true market for education to exist by removing government from this sector entirely.
https://honesteconomics.substack.com/
Anyone know what they're replacing DEI and ESG with? I know they're not abandoning it, they're just hiding it better. Maybe LFD, Liberty Freedom and Democracy?
I would prefer LSD. Let's go back to simpler times.
widespread mdma use would produce world peace.
As someone who teaches in two different universities and consults for major corporations, it is absolutely fucking refreshing that this shit has run its course.
This seems unwarrantedly optimistic.
Someone might be counting their chickens ahead of time.
It absolutely has not run its course. (1) saying something is no longer required, doesn't mean its not going to be used. I guarantee most of the academic jobs (e.g., tenure-track assistant profs) are still going to "request" them (i.e., they are effectively required). What I foresee happening is that the University itself will not have a policy requiring them, but individual departments will. (2) Look up departmental bylaws determining how professors, lecturers, instructors, etc. receive promotion. Bet the vast majority of them have DEI requirements.
Quite right. Public universities have no business imposing DEI statement (or analogous) requirements. - and private universities should not do so either.
Why the fuck would you continue to show up here after that humiliation yesterday, shreek?
I wasn't humiliated, just because someone ripped off my handle, and I'm still not shrike. So fuck off.
It’s Tulpa. Mute it. It will be back in a few days with a new handle (it’s the one who impersonates people), saying the same tired shit.
All you do when you reply to it is entertain the assholes.
Why would I come back every day with a new handle if I was impersonating people you drunken fucking buffoon? I can't believe how unbelievably fucking stupid you are that you still can't figure out who I am. I've literally been doing this for over 10 years and my comments bear literally zero resemblance to Tulpa's, whose last known sock here was LawAndOrderLibertarian like 8 years ago. Shreek got outed yesterday operating at least 18 socks. You can even confirm it with the "mute one account and they all go dark" trick that you constantly lie about. You might want to consider backing off from defending this pedophile piece of shit.
>>Shreek got outed yesterday operating at least 18 socks.
save me the searching. which thread?
wait - I found it above ...
Someone was outed for multiple socks - but it assuredly wasn't me.
Start here: https://reason.com/2023/08/15/trump-and-18-others-charged-with-election-related-crimes-in-georgia/?comments=true#comment-10198298
unbelievable. and totally believable.
Done.
Nobody ripped off your handle, shreek. You got outed socking almost 2 dozen accounts.
How else is he going to get people to agree with him?
DEI statement:
The concept of explicit racism, sexism, and exclusion of persons which is known as DEI is anathema to all concepts of individual freedom, and something I cannot condone.
Damn right I am retired and will never need another job.
>>Have we hit the high-water mark of social-justice loyalty pledges?
that one dude killed himself but I haven't heard anything about a retreat breaking out in total violence yet.
Imagine how much respect Reason could have gotten had they not been shrugging this story beat off since 2012, and instead been hammering the living tar out of it. I know, I know, too much alignment with MAGA themes...
"had they not been shrugging this story beat off "
Trying to warp my head around this phrasing, but not sure I want to.
I shot an elephant in my pajamas.
Eats shoots and leaves.
edit: Warping your head... well played, sir, well played.
Oh, now I get it.
Imagine a Libertarian publication that had these dream-team headlines:
And many, many more.
Sounds like Spiked.