Faculty and Staff Support Letter for ME/NA Identity Category
of 1
- Identifier
- ar_010
- Title
- Faculty and Staff Support Letter for ME/NA Identity Category
- Description
- Letter to all University of Michigan Faculty and Staff seeking support for addition of ME/NA racial category to University documentation
- Creator
- Islamophobia Working Group (University of Michigan)
- Subject
- Arab Americans -- Michigan -- Ann Arbor
- Middle Eastern students -- Michigan -- Ann Arbor
- Student organizations -- Michigan -- Ann Arbor
- University of Michigan -- Faculty
- University of Michigan -- Students
- Source
- https://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/149170
- Publisher
- Islamophobia Working Group (University of Michigan)
- Spatial Coverage
- University of Michigan -- Ann Arbor
- Date
- 2017
- Type
- Text
- Format
- text/PDF 86 kB
- Rights
- This content may be under copyright. Researchers are responsible for determining the appropriate use or reuse of materials.
- Rights Holder
- Copyright is held by the Regents of the University of Michigan but the collection may contain third-party materials for which copyright is not held. Patrons are responsible for determining the appropriate use or reuse of materials.
- Language
- Eng
- Provenance
- Letter originally written (2017) and saved (without alteration) by the Islamophobia Working Group (University of Michigan) on 2019-01-28 to be compiled with a larger collection about MENA students and activism.
- Bibliographic Citation
-
[item], https://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/handle/2027.42/149169, Islamophobia Working Group (University of Michigan) records, Bentley Historical Library,
University of Michigan - extracted text
-
Letter to All University of Michigan Faculty and Staff:
Dear Colleagues,
We, the University of Michigan’s faculty and staff members, are writing to seek your support on
a student-led initiative. As the University continues to implement strategic plans aimed at issues
of diversity, equity, and inclusion, conversations within the Middle Eastern/North African
(ME/NA) community have identified a number of key issues that warrant immediate attention. In
particular, we call for a ME/NA identity category on all University forms and surveys that collect
demographic data on campus, including on applications from prospective students and
employees.
ME/NA students, constrained by Census categories, are expected to check the white identity box.
However, many people of Middle Eastern and North African descent do not identify with or have
the lived experiences of being white in the U.S., especially in a post-9/11 environment of antiArab and anti-Muslim racism. In addition, the lack of an identity box for U-M’s ME/NA students
perpetuates the erasure that many marginalized communities experience. Given that we live in a
state with the largest concentration of ME/NA individuals outside of the Middle East/North
Africa, we have a unique regional responsibility to implement the ME/NA identity category.
Not identifying ME/NA student, staff, and faculty is problematic for a number of reasons that
impact campus climate, including but not limited to: tracking student recruitment and retention
rates; having the ability to reach the community on key issues that directly impact it; identifying
trends in the hiring of faculty, staff, and administration; and bias incident reporting. For the
University, the ability to ascertain who identifies with the ME/NA community is a necessary step
in developing programs and interventions to address any disparities and to achieve Diversity,
Equity, and Inclusion (DEI) goals.
As cited by the DEI strategic plan, UM strives “to broaden its diversity and strengthen its
inclusiveness” and “our strong tradition of student activism and striving for change” has “led us
to this next concerted effort to create a diverse, equitable and inclusive environment for our
entire campus community” (DEI Strategic Plan). We have to call into question our ability to
achieve inclusion when we overlook and misrepresent a community with a distinctive history
and experience at UM and in the state of Michigan.
An identity category option has been a central issue for the ME/NA community on campus for a
number of years. In the past year, the UM Islamophobia Working Group identified the ME/NA
identity box as a central DEI concern in its report to the University. Not only have ME/NA
students pushed for this for over a decade, but, in the last year, more than 12 student
governments on this campus have unanimously passed a resolution or written a statement of
solidarity for this movement, including Central Student Government (CSG), LSA Student
Government (LSA SG), Rackham Student Government (RSG), Engineering Student Government
(ESG), Residence Halls Association (RHA), Law School Student Senate (LSSS), Ross
BBA/MBA Councils, Medical Student Council, and Undergraduate Public Policy Council.
Furthermore, ME/NA students and faculty members organized with the UM-Dearborn and -Flint
student bodies and faculties and have identified that this issue pertains to all three campuses.
Additional Background:
Arab American civil rights groups have been lobbying for a Census category since the 1990s and
over the last few years, the Office of Management and Budget that oversees the U.S. Census has
been testing the possibility of implementing a ME/NA category in 2020. The Arab American
Institute, which has been at the forefront of this initiative nationally, proposes defining the
ME/NA category to include the population with origins in the League of Arab States (Algeria,
Bahrain, Comoros, Djibouti, Egypt, Iraq, Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon, Libya, Mauritania, Morocco,
Oman, Palestine, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Somalia, Sudan, Syria, Tunisia, United Arab Emirates,
and Yemen); in Non-Arab ME/NA States (Turkey, Iran, and Israel); and in trans-national
communities (Assyrians/Chaldeans, Kurds, Berber/Amazigh, etc.). Students on this campus have
proposed that we adopt this same definition.
Higher education institutions have already begun the work of inclusion. In 2013, the University
of California system instituted a similar identity category. Also, Wayne State University
implemented a ME/NA category in 2013 to track retention rates for their ME/NA students.
Furthermore, University of Southern California has also added a ME/NA box for their
undergraduate admissions application. In the meantime, Brown University and other campuses
across the nation are working with their student community to add a box.
---------Thus, the purpose of this letter is to ask for your support in requesting that the University of
Michigan add a ME/NA category when collecting data on our student, staff, faculty, and other
University related community members.
Finally, we ask you, both faculty and staff members, to please circulate this letter widely and to
add your name in support. #WeExist
Sincerely, staff and faculty from the Islamophobia Working Group,
- Evelyn Alsultany, Arthur F. Thurnau Professor, Associate Professor of American Culture
and Director of Arab and Muslim American Studies
- Samer M. Ali, Director, Center for Middle Eastern & North African Studies
-
Robbie Abdelhoq, Program Manager, Office of Student Conflict Resolution
Ashley Bates, Project Coordinator, Conflict and Peace Initiative at the International
Institute
Abby Chien, Program Manager, Office of Multi-Ethnic Student Affairs
Marjorie Horton, Assistant Dean for Undergraduate Education, College of Literature,
Science and the Arts
Charlotte Karem Albrecht, Assistant Professor of American Culture and Women’s
Studies, Faculty in Arab and Muslim American Studies
Karla Mallette, Professor, Italian and Near Eastern Studies and Director of the Islamic
Studies Program
Sammy M. Mansour, Clinical Assistant Professor, Law School
Angelo Pitillo, Director, English Language Instituted
Signatories - the following faculty and staff urge the administration and Regents to implement
the Middle Eastern/North African identity category immediately on all University forms and
surveys that collect demographic data:
---------On the Google form:
Name*
Title/Position*
Department Affiliation*
- Site pages
- Civil Rights; Law; Policy; Activism
University of Michigan, 500, South State Street, Old Fourth Ward, Ann Arbor, Washtenaw County, Michigan, 48109, United States
Part of Faculty and Staff Support Letter for ME/NA Identity Category