Pac-12 Moves to Combat Racism, Promote Social Justice

Collegiate athletic conference Pac-12 has announced a series of initial steps to promote social justice and combat racism, including the creation of a new Head of Diversity and Inclusion position at the Conference.

The sports organization also announced the formation of a social justice and anti-racism advisory group composed of a cross section of university athletics, academic leaders and student-athletes, representing all 12 universities, and the launch of a series of student-athlete and coach anti-racism virtual forums.

Racist Incidents at OSU

Oregon State University has made news in the past for sports-related incidents of racism. As recently as June of this year, the Beavers were in the media spotlight for booting a football player, Rocco Carley, who was accused of making racist remarks. Carley was recorded spewing hateful language including racial slurs, disparaging Black people, Muslims, and gay people. The recording was shared on social media.

Carley issued an apology and claimed he made the comments while joking with friends years ago in high school, pretending to say racist remarks as if he were a man from the South. He claimed that the things he said were not representative of his own beliefs.

And it’s not just the players – fans have also been a problem. In 2018, OSU conducted an investigation after a USC basketball player said fans directed racial slurs at her after a game. The player, Minyon Moore, tweeted about the incident after the game – she later deleted the tweet.

Another incident involved an OSU graduate student, Andrew Oswalt, who was charged with a hate crime after he was accused of putting racist bumper stickers on vehicles in downtown Corvallis.

The first student-athlete forum moderated by current Stanford professor and former Secretary of State Dr. Condoleezza Rice, featuring former Arizona student-athlete and Golden State Warriors head coach Steve Kerr, former Stanford student-athlete and WNBA standout Chiney Ogwumike, and former UCLA student-athlete and NFL star Eric Kendricks as panelists, along with over 250 current student-athletes, was held June 29.

“Social justice has always been an important value and principle for the Pac-12, our member universities and our student-athletes,” said Pac-12 Commissioner Larry Scott. “Now is the time to strengthen our efforts, to listen, to learn and to do more. Today’s announcements represent an important series of first steps as we seek to do the right thing to make our communities and society more humane, just and free of racism.”

Diversity & Inclusion

To drive Conference diversity, equity, and inclusion efforts, and to provide strong support and leadership for membership initiatives, the Pac-12 has made the decision to create a new Head of Diversity and Inclusion role, with the search to fill the position to begin in short order.

The new position will be responsible for ensuring that best practices in minority hiring and advancement are implemented, and to ensure coordination with and support for campus heads of diversity and inclusion. This senior leadership role reflects the Pac-12’s commitment to meaningful change and advancing the same values of diversity and inclusion as represented on member campuses.

The new head will also work closely with Teresa Gould, the Conference’s senior associate commissioner of sports management and institutional services, who was recently charged with driving and coordinating the Pac-12’s anti-racism and social justice initiatives, and holding the organization accountable to developing and delivering against internal and coordinated member action plans to combat racism.

Social Justice & Anti-Racism Advisory Group

The newly formed Pac-12 social justice and anti-racism advisory group will handle anti-racism and social justice initiatives in concert with member universities, including leveraging the collective efforts of all 12 universities and holding the league accountable to action.

The advisory group will be co-chaired by Washington State Athletic Director Pat Chun and USC Faculty Athletics Representative Alan Green, and will include four members each among the student-athlete leadership team, athletic directors, senior women administrators, and faculty athletic representatives, as well as the new Pac-12 Conference Head of Diversity and Inclusion. The advisory group will serve in an advisory capacity directly to the Pac-12 CEO Group and conference commissioner as well as full Pac-12 Council.

Following a series of initial conversations with student-athletes and coaches, the advisory group will lead the development of the Conference’s comprehensive plan on social justice and anti-racism.

The plan will provide consistency and alignment between internal efforts at the Pac-12 office as well as external efforts in support of member universities, athletics departments, and Pac-12 student-athletes, and will include such elements as community engagement, educational programming, amplifying collective voice, organizational change in the workplace, and action initiatives around specific topics such as influencing public policy through voting, improving relations with law enforcement, and developing platforms for student-athletes to tell their stories.

Student-Athlete & Coach Anti-Racism Forums

The idea to launch two sets of virtual anti-racism forums – a series for student-athletes and a series for coaches – came directly from conversations with student-athletes, coaches, and campus leaders over the past weeks. The purpose of the student-athlete forums is to provide student-athletes with space to discuss anti-racism and social justice issues with individuals with expertise in addressing and combating racism and using their voice to promote social justice, to normalize these conversations, and to set a template for further conversations on campus with their teams and athletic departments.

The first coaches’ forum will take place on July 21 in collaboration with the Institute of Sport and Social Justice, and will be focused on best practices in addressing racism and promoting social justice for coaches within their programs. The virtual workshop will include such topics as facilitating difficult conversations with student-athletes, building trust and community, and educational content such as understanding privilege, athletes and activism, and the history of protests.

Like the student-athlete forums, these conversations will feature subject matter experts and provide an opportunity for robust discussion and learning for coaches.

About the Pac-12 Conference 

The Conference has a tradition as the “Conference of Champions,” leading the nation in NCAA Championships in 54 of the last 60 years, with 529 NCAA team titles overall.

The Conference comprises 12 leading U.S. universities – the University of Arizona, Arizona State University, the University of California at Berkeley, the University of California at Los Angeles, the University of Colorado, the University of Oregon, Oregon State University, Stanford University, the University of Southern California, the University of Utah, the University of Washington, and Washington State University.

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