Current:Home > MyBU finds Ibram X. Kendi’s antiracist research center managed funds properly, despite turmoil -Wealth Impact Academy
BU finds Ibram X. Kendi’s antiracist research center managed funds properly, despite turmoil
View
Date:2025-04-15 02:37:27
Boston University said Tuesday that its initial inquiry into the antiracist research center run by best-selling author and academic Ibram X. Kendi found no issues with how it managed its finances. After the announcement, Kendi said he was eager to get back to work.
The university launched the inquiry into the financials of the BU Center for Antiracist Research, or CAR, in September, after acknowledging the organization was laying off about half of its staff and changing its operating model.
“Our auditors concluded that CAR’s financial management of its grants and gifts was appropriate,” Gary Nicksa, BU’s chief financial officer and treasurer, said in a statement Tuesday.
The university hired Kendi in 2020 to found the center and join the faculty as a history professor after his 2019 memoir, “How to Be an Antiracist,” catapulted him to national prominence, which was only heightened after the murder of George Floyd by then-police officers in Minneapolis.
“Unfortunately, one of the most widely held racist ideas is the idea that Black people can’t manage money or Black people take money,” Kendi told The Associated Press in an interview Tuesday. “It was those two allegations that were expressed and connected to me that, of course, people didn’t necessarily need evidence to substantiate their belief that that happened because apparently my skin color was enough evidence.”
BU said Tuesday the center had laid off 19 staffers and reiterated that it will restructure its work to host scholars for nine-month fellowships, instead of conducting research through its own employees, and will also host public events.
The center has raised more than $50 million, with $30 million of that put into an endowment, the university said. It promised to create a number of projects and research initiatives, some of which it has, like the publication, “ The Emancipator,” which will continue, as well as a database tracking information related to COVID-19 and race, though that stopped being updated in March 2021.
Other initiatives, like creating a graduate program and undergraduate minor in antiracist studies and compiling a database of ongoing antiracist campaigns, have not been completed and won’t be, Kendi said. He and his staff have been in touch with their funders, he said, who were concerned but ultimately supportive as they know new organizations face growing pains.
“What they saw us experiencing was quite normal, even if the coverage around it was was abnormal,” Kendi said of the center’s donors. In a similar vein, he reposted a comment on the social media platform X on Tuesday that predicted the news of BU’s audit would not get as widely covered as the announcement of the layoffs had been.
The university’s inquiry will continue, now focusing on the center’s management of grants from outside funders, including the extent to which it complied with required reporting. The university has also hired the consulting firm Korn Ferry to review the center’s culture and management, which is ongoing.
When the university acknowledged the layoffs in September, current and former staffers spoke publicly in news reports and op-eds about their frustrations with Kendi’s management, saying too much power was concentrated in his hands. Some questioned what had been accomplished with the tens of millions given to the center.
The university’s inquiry and finding announced Tuesday aimed to address those questions, though the university declined a request to share the audit.
When asked about the criticisms of his former colleagues, Kendi said if he could do it over again, he would have started with a fellowship model and the new structure. He added that many people have advised and supported him over the past three years, “as we were trying to build a new organization from scratch during a pandemic era while responding to the urgency of the moment.”
“I’ve also learned how steep the learning curve is when you have a startup and you’re in the public life,” he added.
Earl Lewis, a historian, former provost and former president of The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, has advised research centers and now runs the University of Michigan Center for Social Solutions, which he founded. He said it was not at all unusual for new research institutes at universities to restructure, especially in the first years of operating.
If he had been advising Kendi back in 2020 when the center opened, Lewis said, he would have told him, “Be strategic about the first three hires that you make. Make sure that you have somebody who is really steeped in that university’s administrative and financial culture,” and to layout very specifically what projects the center would tackle in its first three years.
“The former provost in me would have actually asked for a document asking, ‘Okay, tell me where you want to be in five years. Tell me what you want to try to achieve by ten years,’” Lewis said.
Kendi said the center did engage in an internal planning process in its first two years and intends to hire a consulting firm to help them create short- and long-term plans after the restructuring.
___
Associated Press coverage of philanthropy and nonprofits receives support through the AP’s collaboration with The Conversation US, with funding from Lilly Endowment Inc. The AP is solely responsible for this content. For all of AP’s philanthropy coverage, visit https://apnews.com/hub/philanthropy.
veryGood! (5929)
Related
- Grammy nominee Teddy Swims on love, growth and embracing change
- Country Singer Jason Isbell Files for Divorce From Amanda Shires After 10 Years of Marriage
- Who is Michelle Troconis? What we know about suspect on trial for allegedly covering up Jennifer Dulos' murder
- AP Week in Pictures: North America
- The Louvre will be renovated and the 'Mona Lisa' will have her own room
- Drivers using Apple Vision Pro headsets prompt road safety concerns
- Dismembered goats, chicken found at University of Rochester: Deaths may be 'religious in nature'
- 200 victims allege child sex abuse in Maryland youth detention facilities
- The Super Bowl could end in a 'three
- Devin Hester makes history as first return specialist selected to Pro Football Hall of Fame
Ranking
- Taylor Swift Eras Archive site launches on singer's 35th birthday. What is it?
- Georgia House backs state income tax and property tax cuts in unanimous votes
- Biden and Trump: How the two classified documents investigations came to different endings
- NBA trade tracker: Gordon Hayward, Bojan Bogdanovic, Patrick Beverley on the move
- What were Tom Selleck's juicy final 'Blue Bloods' words in Reagan family
- Elon Musk is synonymous with Tesla. Is that good or bad for shareholders?
- CIA terminates whistleblower who prompted flood of sexual misconduct complaints
- Utah is pushing back against ever-tightening EPA air pollution standards
Recommendation
US wholesale inflation accelerated in November in sign that some price pressures remain elevated
Frankenstein stories are taking over Hollywood. But this time, women are the focus.
New Hampshire Senate votes to move state primary from September to June. The House wants August
Maryland judges’ personal information protected under bill passed by Senate after fatal shooting
Tom Holland's New Venture Revealed
Hawaii’s high court cites ‘The Wire’ in rebuke of US Supreme Court decision that expanded gun rights
Robert De Niro says grandson's overdose death was 'a shock' and 'shouldn’t have happened'
Enbridge appeals to vacate an order that would shut down its pipeline