https://www.economist.com/the-economist-explains/2018/05/08/the-rise-of-universities-diversity-bureaucrats Skip to content * Menu * Weekly edition * Search Log in * Featured + War in Ukraine + Recession watch + The World Ahead 2023 + US politics + Climate change + Coronavirus + 1843 magazine + The world in brief * Sections + The world this week + Leaders + Letters + Briefing + United States + The Americas + Asia + China + Middle East & Africa + Europe + Britain + International + Business + Finance & economics + Science & technology + Culture + Graphic detail + Obituary + Special reports + Technology Quarterly + Essay + By Invitation + Schools brief + The Economist explains + The Economist reads * More + Newsletters + Podcasts + Films + Subscriber events + The Economist app + Online courses * My Economist * Saved stories * Log out * Saved stories * Account * Log out Search [ ] The Economist explains The rise of universities' diversity bureaucrats How is the hiring spree for a new kind of official changing higher education in America? [20180505_B] May 8th 2018 Share By B.S. AMERICAN universities are boosting spending on "diversity officials". At the University of California, Berkeley, for example, the number of diversity bureaucrats has grown to 175 or so, even as state funding to the university has been cut. Diversity officials promote the hiring of ethnic minorities and women, launch campaigns to promote dialogue, and write strategic plans on increasing equity and inclusion on campus. Many issue guidance on avoiding sexist language, unacceptable lyrics and inappropriate clothing and hairstyles. Some are paid lavishly: the University of Michigan's diversity chief is reported to earn $385,000 a year. What explains their rise? Recent years have seen a large growth in media coverage of claims that minorities and women are treated poorly on American campuses. Black students, says Derald Wing Sue, a psychologist at Columbia University, often complain that when they are complimented in class, "it's almost as if the professor is surprised" that blacks can be articulately intelligent. Dr Sue's writings have helped popularise the notion that diversity officials are needed to squash such "micro-aggressions". As Southern Utah University's Centre for Diversity and Inclusion has put it, campus speech and dress should "validate people's identities and cultures". Some schools require transgressors to take diversity training, or mandate it for everyone. Students at the University of Missouri must attend training to prevent even "unconscious discrimination". A study of 669 American universities found that nearly a third require that faculty attend diversity training. Universities say that a boom in regulations under Barack Obama's administration increased the need to hire more bureaucrats of every kind. But one study found that for every dollar spent to comply with government rules, voluntary spending on bureaucracy totalled $2 at public universities and $3 at private ones. Robert Martin of Centre College in Kentucky, a co-author of the study, says the real reason for the growth in spending is that administrators want to hire subordinates, thereby boosting their own authority and often pay, rather than faculty, over whom they have less power. Bureaucrats outnumber faculty 2:1 at public universities and 2.5:1 at private colleges, double the ratio in the 1970s. Diversity is the top justification for these hires, says Richard Vedder of the Centre for College Affordability and Productivity, a think-tank. Of more than 1,000 bureaucrats at Ohio University in Athens, 400 are superfluous, he reckons. If let go, tuition fees could be cut by a fifth. One result of all this is growing "resistance, anger, grumpiness, and eventually backlash" to the proliferation of diversity officials, says Alexandra Kalev of Tel Aviv University, one of the authors of the study on diversity training at American universities. Many white male professors, she found, now limit campus interaction with minorities and women, lest an unintentional slight get them in trouble. High spending on diversity officials also leads to fewer classes, as well as higher tuition fees, which make it harder for minorities, who are disproportionately poor, to attend college. Might students rebel? It looks unlikely. The era of Donald Trump seems to have strengthened the diversity bureaucracy's belief that students' feelings must be protected. Share Reuse this content More from The Economist explains [yH5BAEAAAA][20230204_B] How do you brew non-alcoholic beer? 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