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Submit your Research - Make it Global NewsIn the competitive world of higher education faculty hiring, one requirement has become notably less common: the Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI) statement. Once a staple in many academic job applications, these essays—typically one to two pages where candidates outline their contributions to fostering diverse and inclusive environments—have seen a marked decline across U.S. universities and colleges. Recent data reveals that fewer hiring cycles now request them, signaling a shift driven by legal, political, and institutional pressures. This change raises questions about recruitment practices, academic freedom, and how institutions will pursue inclusivity moving forward.
📉 The Sharp Drop in DEI Statement Requests
Comprehensive analyses of thousands of faculty job postings paint a clear picture of this trend. According to a Heterodox Academy report analyzing over 16,500 full-time faculty advertisements from the fall 2025 hiring cycle, explicit requests for DEI-related materials plummeted from about 25 percent in 2024 to just 11 percent in 2025—a more than 50 percent reduction. Standalone DEI statements, once required in 13.4 percent of postings, now appear in only 2.5 percent. Another study of over 10,000 ads from the 2024-2025 cycle found 22.3 percent still included some DEI component, but this figure has continued to fall amid ongoing scrutiny.
Community colleges bucked the trend slightly, rising from 4.8 percent to 8.3 percent, but full-time tenure-track positions saw the steepest drops. Private institutions, which previously led at nearly 30 percent, now hover around 14.5 percent, while public universities fell from 22.1 percent to 9.6 percent.
Historical Context: From Ubiquity to Controversy
DEI statements emerged prominently in the mid-2010s as part of broader efforts to address underrepresentation in academia. By 2020, they were standard at many elite institutions, with the University of California system mandating them since the early 2000s but ramping up enforcement. Proponents argued they helped identify candidates committed to inclusive teaching, mentoring, and research, potentially improving campus climates and student outcomes.
However, critics viewed them as ideological litmus tests that prioritized performative language over scholarly merit, potentially violating First Amendment principles of compelled speech. Studies showed faculty evaluators favored statements emphasizing race, ethnicity, and gender over those highlighting viewpoint diversity, with only 13 to 18 percent of DEI-requesting ads mentioning intellectual diversity.
Legislative and Federal Pressures Fueling the Shift
A wave of state laws has accelerated the decline. By 2026, at least 17 states—including Florida, Texas, Idaho, Utah, Ohio, and Indiana—have enacted restrictions on DEI statements in public university hiring. For instance, Idaho's Senate Bill 1274, effective July 2024, led all four-year public colleges to eliminate them. Ohio's March 2025 law bans their use in hiring, promotion, and admissions, while Indiana mandates "neutrality statements" promoting intellectual diversity.
The Trump administration's return in January 2025 amplified this through executive orders like EO 14173, targeting "illegal and immoral discrimination programs" labeled DEI. Federal agencies were directed to insert anti-DEI clauses into contracts, with threats to withhold funding from non-compliant institutions. The Department of Education launched probes into over 50 universities across 41 states for alleged race-based preferences, prompting preemptive changes.
The Chronicle of Higher Education tracks over 450 campuses dismantling DEI elements, with more than 300 eliminating hiring requirements by April 2026.
Elite Institutions Lead the Way
Prominent universities have proactively dropped DEI mandates. The University of California system announced in March 2025 it would no longer permit departments to require diversity statements, citing potential misalignment with expertise and amid federal scrutiny. MIT banned them in 2024, followed by Harvard, the University of Michigan (December 2024), and the University of Utah. Georgia's public university system barred them in 2023, and the University of Illinois removed optional DEI statements from tenure processes.
Even in blue states, caution prevails. The University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and others have adjusted to avoid funding risks.
Regional and Disciplinary Variations Persist
Declines are uneven. Northeast and West Coast institutions request DEI materials more frequently than those in the Southeast or Midwest. Social sciences and humanities postings are twice as likely to include them compared to STEM fields (24.8 percent vs. 12 percent in some analyses). Private colleges maintain higher rates, potentially evading state bans through rephrasing as "commitment to inclusive excellence" or embedding in cover letters—37 percent of 2025 ads signaled DEI value without explicit requirements.
Impacts on the Academic Job Market
For job seekers, this means streamlined applications: fewer essays to craft, focusing instead on research, teaching, and service statements. However, the job market remains brutal, with hiring freezes and budget cuts exacerbating competition. DEI's decline may broaden applicant pools by reducing perceived ideological barriers, potentially attracting conservative or viewpoint-diverse scholars previously deterred.
Critics worry it hampers efforts to recruit underrepresented faculty. Proponents of reform argue merit-based hiring will yield better outcomes, citing studies where DEI statements screened out qualified candidates lacking specific demographic experiences.
Stakeholder Perspectives: A Divided Debate
Faculty unions like the AAUP decry the changes as attacks on equity, while groups like Heterodox Academy celebrate them as protecting academic freedom. Administrators navigate a minefield: 86 campuses altered DEI pre-legislation, per the Chronicle, often renaming offices or shifting to "belonging" initiatives.
- Pro-DEI: Essential for holistic evaluation, addressing systemic biases.
- Anti-DEI: Compelled speech, ineffective, distracts from excellence.
- Middle ground: Optional contributions to diversity in existing materials.
What Comes Next? Alternatives to DEI Statements
Institutions are pivoting: University of Iowa emphasizes "inclusive excellence" in job descriptions without mandates. Some adopt teaching philosophies highlighting diverse pedagogies. Emerging is focus on "viewpoint diversity," though rare (13 percent of ads).
Legal challenges continue: Lawsuits against UC's former policy were dismissed, but Trump's orders face suits from higher ed coalitions alleging overreach.
Implications for Faculty Aspirants and Administrators
Aspiring professors should tailor materials to highlight inclusive practices organically—e.g., mentoring diverse students in research statements. Track state-specific rules via sites like the Chronicle's tracker. Administrators must balance compliance with mission, perhaps through data-driven diversity metrics.
Future Outlook: A Merit-Focused Renaissance?
By 2026, expect further erosion in red states and caution elsewhere. If federal probes intensify, even blue-state privates may comply. Positive: Potentially revitalized hiring emphasizing scholarship over ideology, aiding U.S. higher ed's global competitiveness.
For job seekers, opportunity lies in excellence: Polish CVs, secure strong letters, and demonstrate impact. Resources like AcademicJobs.com's CV guide remain vital.
Actionable Insights for Navigating the New Landscape
To thrive:
- Research postings on platforms like HigherEdJobs for DEI signals.
- Prepare versatile statements adaptable to "inclusion" prompts.
- Network via conferences, highlighting collaborative work.
- Monitor state laws and federal updates.
- Leverage faculty positions without DEI hurdles.
This evolution underscores higher ed's adaptability amid scrutiny, prioritizing merit while valuing true diversity of thought and background.
Photo by Markus Winkler on Unsplash

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