USC Passes Diversity Resolution Following Racial Slur Row

The University of Southern California has passed a diversity resolution following a demand to create an inclusion climate for minority students after an Indian American student was the victim of a racial slur. Authorities at USC announced Nov. 18 they would begin taking steps to implement more diversity programs on campus, breitbart.com reported.

The announcement was made after a student Senate voting, held Nov. 10, to decide the fate of the students’ demand of $100 million in funds to create an “inclusion climate” for minority students on the campus. A final vote was held with 11 votes in favor and one against the demand.

Michael Quick, provost and senior vice president of the university, sent out a memo for “access and opportunity, diversity and inclusion,” in which he announced the establishment of two new funds.

The memo said the demands were agreed to and that each of the programs would receive $100,000 to support, address and enhance diversity. “Improving campus climate is of tremendous value in itself. But creating an inclusive and welcoming environment is also part of the greater goal of how the university fulfils its commitment to enlarge access and opportunity,” Quick wrote in the memo.

He agreed that the campus was not immune to alleged “acts of injustice, bias and disrespect against groups and individuals (that) have been playing out recently across our nation.”

According to the memo, the school would soon begin a strategic planning process “that will chart a course for the university over the next several years.”

The demand arose from an incident in September in which a fraternity member subjected Rini Sampath, an Indian American student and president of the students’ association at the university, to a racial slur. The fraternity member hurled a racial epithet and threw his drink at Sampath.

The 21-year-old student then shared the incident on social media and lambasted the racial abuse experienced by other students from different ethnicities. This sparked a debate on the campus pressurizing the university officials to later condemn the incident. Meanwhile, a reporting button has been added to the university’s LiveSafe app so that students can immediately report incidents of bias and discrimination.

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