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USC opens segregated event to entire student body after FIREletter

University of Southern California entrance

The University of Southern California did the right thing, and we commend the university for being responsive when FIREflagged this issue. (Simone Hogan / Shutterstock.com)

The University of Southern California has clarified that all students, regardless of race, are welcome at a campus event discussing issues facing black male students. FIREwrote to USC on Monday amid concerns the event unlawfully excluded some students on the basis of race.

USC is holding the 鈥淏lack Men Will Summit鈥 today, an event put on by its Center for Black Cultural and Student Affairs. The event 鈥渆merged from the recognition of the lack of restorative and healing spaces for Black male identified students at USC and in the larger community,鈥 according to its description. The event was  billed as 鈥渁 space for all students who identify as Black men at USC to talk about wellness and foster community & solidarity,鈥 but after a letter from 果冻传媒app官方, it is as 鈥渙pen to all USC students.鈥 

Fostering discussion about and meeting the needs of USC鈥檚 minority student communities is a laudable and vital goal. But the university cannot serve it by employing racial segregation to bar students from educational events. 

The Supreme Court addressed this issue in , which involved a public law school that admitted a student of color but separated him from other students based on his race. As the Court wrote:

[T]he State, in administering the facilities it affords for professional and graduate study, sets McLaurin apart from the other students. The result is that appellant is handicapped in his pursuit of effective graduate instruction. Such restrictions impair and inhibit his ability to study, to engage in discussions, and exchange views with other students, and, in general, to learn his profession.

贵滨搁贰鈥檚 letter to USC highlighted this point, and added: 

Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, which effectuates the Equal Protection Clause, forbids all institutions receiving federal financial assistance鈥攚hether the institution is public or private鈥攆rom discriminating 鈥渙n the basis of race, color, or national origin.鈥 Colleges and universities like USC that accept payments from students who receive federal financial aid are bound by Title VI. 

Likewise, in Regents of Univ. of Cal. v. Bakke, the Supreme Court refused to adopt a more restrictive view of the Equal Protection clause to favor historically marginalized groups, even where arguably well-intentioned.

USC鈥檚 own 鈥溾 policy 鈥減rohibits discrimination on the basis of actual or perceived race, color, ethnicity鈥 in 鈥渁ny of the University鈥檚 educational or otherwise federally funded programs and activities[.]鈥 

USC did the right thing here, and we commend the university for being responsive when FIREflagged this issue.

Unfortunately, other colleges and universities have recently gone forward with similar, racially segregated events, suggesting the emergence of a trend. 

For example, Elizabethtown College held a racially segregated series for 鈥減eople who identify as individuals of color鈥 to explore the history of white supremacy and colonization. Harvard reserved 鈥渁n exclusive space for Black-identifying audience members鈥 at a performance of Macbeth. And Lewis & Clark College required incoming students to participate in an event called 鈥淓ngage for Racial Justice鈥 where students had to provide their race so the college could organize them into 鈥渁ffinity groups.鈥 

These colleges and universities would likely claim they are well-intentioned for trying to spur conversation among different parts of their student bodies. Indeed, Lewis and Clark said its event was not 鈥渋nvidious鈥 but rather was designed to be as 鈥渋nclusive as possible.鈥 But as we wrote in our letter to Elizabethtown: 鈥淕ood intentions do not make race-based segregation lawful.鈥 

FIRE commends USC for clarifying the event is open to all students, regardless of their race. 

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