PhD Project CEO Speaks: ‘We're Not Backing Down'
Alfonzo Alexander is only a couple of months into his job as CEO and president of The PhD Project, but he finds himself leading the organization through the most turbulent chapter in its 31 years.The nonprofit is under federal investigation by the Trump administration's Department of Education, facing allegations it and dozens of the schools it worked with engaged in race-exclusionary practices that violate Title VI of the 1964 Civil Rights Act. Several schools that have supported the organization in past have publicly disavowed it.
Asked what it's like to become a target of conservative activists, who began attacking the PhD Project in January as part of a broader effort to discredit and dismantle diversity, equity and inclusion programs across U.S. higher education, 'It's uncertain. It's scary,' Alexander admits. 'But we're focused on doing what's right, and we believe we'll be stronger for it.'
A 20% HIT TO THE NONPROFIT'S FINANCES
PdD Project president & CEO Alfonzo Alexander: 'We're tightening our belts, but we're not giving up on any of our partners. We're working to help them understand who we are now'
Launched in 1994, The PhD Project has helped increase the number of Black/African American, Latinx/Hispanic American, and Native American professors in U.S. business schools from just 294 to more than 1,700. Of those, over 1,300 are currently teaching, and another 250 are enrolled in business Ph.D. programs.
The nonprofit hosts an annual conference — held this year in Chicago — designed to introduce underrepresented professionals to academic careers. It also provides support for doctoral candidates through graduation and into faculty life.
The Department of Education's investigation, announced March 10, names 45 business schools and universities affiliated with The PhD Project, including Yale, Cornell, MIT, NYU, and Berkeley. It claims the nonprofit's programming and partnerships may unlawfully limit participation based on race. Conservative critics have gone so far as to accuse the organization of 'racial segregation.'
Several schools, including Arizona State, Iowa, Kentucky, and Wyoming, have withdrawn their support. In all, about 20% of institutional partners have stepped back, forcing the nonprofit to confront both financial and reputational fallout.
'WE'RE BROADENING OUR TALENT PIPELINE'
Alexander, who officially took the helm as The PhD Project's CEO and President in January after years of working with the nonprofit, says the organization had already begun reexamining its policies before the investigation was announced. In response to growing political pressure, it has updated its mission and vision statements and removed race and ethnicity from its application criteria.
'We're broadening our talent pipeline,' he tells Poets&Quants in an interview Tuesday (March 25). 'We're now focused on outcomes, not identity. The mission is to expand the pool of workplace talent by developing business school faculty who encourage, mentor, and support tomorrow's leaders.'
Saying the Department of Education appears to be acting on outdated information, Alexander is confident that the organization's changes will satisfy legal scrutiny. 'We are compliant with current federal guidelines, and we opened up this year's conference to applicants from a wide range of backgrounds,' he says.
But the situation has taken a toll. 'We're going to have to seek new funding sources,' he acknowledges. The PhD Project has been reported to have a total budget of around $2 million, before the impact of the current controversy. 'We're tightening our belts, but we're not giving up on any of our partners. We're working to help them understand who we are now.'
STAYING THE COURSE
Despite the challenges, Alexander, remains optimistic. Since its inception, The PhD Project has achieved remarkable success: 1,700 graduates, a 90% Ph.D. completion rate (compared to a national average of 70%), and a 97% rate of graduates entering academia. Its network includes 71 current or former business school deans and eight university presidents.
'That's impact,' says Alexander, who came to lead The PhD Project after 17 years at the National Association of State Boards of Accountancy, the last six as its chief ethics and diversity officer. 'And it's exactly why this work must continue.'
He also says that along with the increased scrutiny of the past two months, support from individuals and institutions has been overwhelming. 'We've received emails, donations, social media messages, blog posts — people sharing what this organization has meant to them,' he says. 'Even those who had to pause their support have done so apologetically.'
Alexander sees the current crisis as an opportunity. 'We're resetting,' he says. 'We're developing new programs that comply with federal law but still reflect our mission of cultivating talent and excellence. A year or two from now, we'll look back and say: we came through this stronger.'
For now, The PhD Project is staying the course. 'We believe in what we do. We believe in the power of education, representation, and mentorship,' Alexander says. 'And we're not backing down.'
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Los Angeles Times
8 hours ago
- Los Angeles Times
ICE arrested a California union leader. Does Trump understand what that means?
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The union he is president of — SEIU United Service Workers West — started the Justice for Janitors campaign in 1990, a bottom-up movement that in Los Angeles was mostly powered by the immigrant Latina women who cleaned commercial office space for wages as low as $7 an hour. After weeks of protests, police attacked those Latina workers in June of that year in what became known as the 'Battle of Century City.' Two dozen workers were injured but the union did not back down. Eventually, it won the contracts it was seeking, and equally as important, it won public support. Huerta joined USWW a few years after that incident, growing the Justice for Janitors campaign. The union was and has always been one powered by immigrant workers who saw that collective power was their best power, and Huerta has led decades of building that truth into a practical force. He is, says Orr, an organizer who knows how to bring people together. 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It's the bedrock of their power. In arresting Huerta, that solidarity has been supercharged. Already, union members from across the state are making plans to gather Monday for Huerta's arraignment in downtown Los Angeles. Meanwhile, Stephen Miller, the Santa Monica native and architect of Trump's deportation plans, has said the raids we are seeing now are just the beginning, and that he would like to see thousands of arrests every day, because our immigrant communities are filled with 'every kind of criminal thug that you can imagine on planet earth.' But in arresting Huerta, the battleground has been redrawn in ways we don't fully yet appreciate. No doubt, Miller will have his way and the raids will not only continue, but increase. But also, the unions are not going to back down. 'Right now, just in the last 14 hours, labor unions are joining together from far and wide, communities are reaching out in ways I've never seen,' Orr told me. 'Something is different.' 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Yahoo
8 hours ago
- Yahoo
Opinion - Scott Jennings is correct about Wes Moore
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This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.


Business Upturn
9 hours ago
- Business Upturn
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