© 2025 Kansas City Public Radio
NPR in Kansas City
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

UMKC becomes latest public university to close its diversity and inclusion office

Interior view inside a large building looking through a large, plate-glass window. On the window is a large blue kangaroo image with a yellow sweatshirt that reads "UKC." People can be seen inside the building standing nearby and others can be seen walking outdoors. Many have backpacks on and appear to be students.
Carlos Moreno
/
KCUR 89.3
UMKC Chancellor Mauli Agrawal announced Friday the school would be closing its division of Diversity and Inclusion.

UMKC Chancellor Mauli Agrawal said the school would move to a "decentralized campus inclusion model" starting Nov. 1. The decision follows several attacks on DEI by Missouri GOP leaders, and policy changes within the University of Missouri system, such as the ending of race-conscious scholarships.

The University of Missouri-Kansas City announced Friday it will dissolve its Diversity and Inclusion division and move to a “decentralized” model starting Nov. 1.

The central office currently has only “1.5 full-time employees,” according to an email from Chancellor Mauli Agrawal.

Dr. Viviana Grieco, who has been serving as the interim vice chancellor of the department, will remain with the university as chancellor faculty fellow through the end of the semester to help with the transition.

The key jobs of the Diversity and Inclusion department will be moved to other university departments. They include:

  • Annual speaker events like the Martin Luther King Jr. Lecture Series and the César Chávez Lecture Series will be moved to the Department of External Relations and Constituent Engagement. That department will also handle conferences, like the Women of Color Leadership Conference.
  • On-demand inclusion training for employees will be led by Human Resources.
  • The Roos Read book event, part of the First Semester Experience course, will be led by the Office of Curriculum and Assessment.

Agrawal says the decision came after meeting with stakeholder groups about the structure of the university’s inclusion efforts. In an email to the campus, Agrawal said the move follows similar ones from the University of Missouri and the University of Kansas after “recent national and legislative trends.”

The University of Missouri eliminated its division focused on diversity, social equity and inclusion in July after Republican pressure. Last year, the Missouri legislature limited colleges from using diversity questions on hiring requirements and banned schools from teaching diversity-related topics.

“When a goal or initiative is centered in one office, or under one leader, it’s too easy to think that work is someone else’s job, not ours,” Agrawal said. “We all must contribute to the mission of ensuring that all students, faculty and staff are welcomed, valued and provided opportunities to succeed here at UMKC.”

Agrawal said in the email that he would appoint a new coordinating council of campus leaders to oversee Pillar 4 of the school’s strategic plan: “foster an environment of inclusive opportunity and excellence.” That group will be in place of the Chancellor's Diversity Council.

Students and faculty have pushed back on the elimination of diversity programs at other universities. When the University of Kansas announced their change, students told the Kansas News Service that they worried that the move would eliminate spaces where marginalized students could feel at home.

At the University of Missouri, students worried the move would discourage students of color from joining student affinity groups.

UMKC declined to comment further for this story.

KCUR's Kate Mays contributed reporting.

Disclosure: KCUR 89.3 is licensed to the University of Missouri Board of Curators and is an editorially independent community service of the University of Missouri-Kansas City.

As KCUR's local government reporter, I’ll hold our leaders accountable and show how their decisions about development, transit and the economy shape your life. I meet with people at city council meetings, on the picket lines and in their community to break down how power and inequities change our community. Email me at savannahhawley@kcur.org.
KCUR prides ourselves on bringing local journalism to the public without a paywall — ever.

Our reporting will always be free for you to read. But it's not free to produce.

As a nonprofit, we rely on your donations to keep operating and trying new things. If you value our work, consider becoming a member.