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SIU system leaders react to the Supreme Court ruling on affirmative action in higher ed

Leaders in the Southern Illinois University system released a joint statement reacting to the U.S. Supreme Court ruling limiting how universities consider race in student admissions.

In response to the court’s ruling, President Mahony, SIUC Chancellor Lane, SIU School of Medicine Dean Kruse, and SIUE Chancellor Minor released the following statement.

Since 1978, the US Supreme Court has held that race may be considered, in addition to other factors, in the admissions process, based on a "compelling interest" of fostering a diverse student body on college campuses which enhance the educational experience. Today the U.S. Supreme Court issued rulings in Students for Fair Admissions v. Harvard and Students for Fair Admissions v. University of North Carolina, twin cases that seek the prohibition of limited consideration of an
applicant’s racial or ethnic background in the higher education admissions process. The court took action to say that colleges and universities may no longer use race as an express factor in admissions.

While the SIU System does not use race as a factor in undergraduate admissions decisions, our
campus leaders are deeply concerned about the court’s decision. Today’s ruling, coupled with similar decisions in several states across the country, may embolden critics of diversity and reverse generations of progress at colleges, universities and the nation.

The Southern Illinois University System (SIU) campuses are unified in our commitment to our System priority of promoting diversity, equity and inclusion in all that we do. We share in the belief that an educational system that actively supports a diversity of students leads to more diverse thought and interaction on college campuses, which benefits all students.

In 2021, SIU took the bold step of announcing that as a university system, it is anti-racist and would actively work towards developing and maintaining policies, behaviors and systems that enhance racial equity and promote positive and sustainable change for faculty, staff and students. It is
based on this commitment to anti-racism, diversity, equity and inclusion (ADEI) that the university cautions that decisions like the one just made by the court will have a cooling effect on equity and inclusion efforts as well as lead to widening gaps in college completion.

Fortunately for us in Illinois, these efforts have been very complementary to the policies and priorities of our statewide elected leaders, members of the state legislature and higher education policy leaders who have and will continue to make diversity a priority.

Despite this decision, the impact of which will continue to unfold, our goal will be to work within all legal limits to ensure our campuses are able to advance all mission-based ADEI goals and to promote the ideal that educational excellence depends on having institutions that condemn racism, promote diversity and inclusion and equitably focus on giving all students the tools they need to succeed in their college experience and beyond.

As a news producer and news anchor on All Things Considered, Brad provides the listeners with a recap of the day's top local and state news as well as breaking news at any given time. Contact WSIU Radio at 618-453-6101 or email wsiunews@wsiu.org
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