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  • Date:

    United States of America v. Regents of the University of California (C.D. Cal. Feb. 24, 2026)  

    Complaint Seeking Injunctive Relief. Plaintiff, the United States Department of Justice (DOJ), filed a lawsuit against the Regents of the University of California, alleging that UCLA violated Title VII by allowing a hostile work environment for Jewish and Israeli employees. The complaint alleges that the antisemitic harassment was both severe and pervasive. The complaint further alleges that the university failed to enforce its policies, properly investigate complaints, or discipline offenders, and that the internal complaint system was ineffective. DOJ is seeking injunctive relief, includinrequiring various policy reforms and anti-discrimination trainingand also damages for employeewho were subjected to a hostile work environment or other discriminatory conduct.

    Topics:

    Discrimination, Accommodation, & Diversity | Enforcement of Non-Discrimination Laws | Race and National Origin Discrimination

  • Date:

    OCR Enters into Agreements with 31 Colleges and Universities to End Partnerships with the PhD Project (Feb. 19, 2026)

    The Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights (OCR) announced that it has entered into 31 resolution agreements with institutions of higher education requiring them to cease their partnerships with the PhD project. In addition to ending collaboration with the PhD project, the institutions also agreed to conduct a review of their partnerships with external organizations to identify any that violate Title VI by restricting participation based on race. OCR indicated it is still negotiating with 14 schools.

    Topics:

    Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) and Temporary Protected Status (TPS) | Discrimination, Accommodation, & Diversity | Employment of Foreign Nationals | Enforcement of Non-Discrimination Laws | Faculty & Staff | Financial Aid, Scholarships, & Student Loans | Immigration | Race and National Origin Discrimination | Students

  • Date:

    Court Grants Joint Motion by Parties to Dismiss NEA Lawsuit challenging February 14 Dear Colleague Letter  (Feb. 18, 2026)

    A federal district court judge in New Hampshire has formally dismissed a year-long lawsuit brought by the NEA, ACLU, and others challenging the Trump Administration’s February 14 2025 Dear Colleague Letter (“DCL”) after the parties submitted a joint motion to drop the case. The lawsuit challenged the DCL, as well as a related certification requirement for schools and Frequently Asked Questions document, alleging that the guidance violated the First and Fifth Amendments and was in violation of the Administrative Procedure Act (APA). The joint motion to dismiss was filed on February 3, shortly after the DCL was vacated and set aside by a district judge in Maryland in American Federation of Teachers, et al. v. United States Department of Education. The joint motion requires the Department to agree that “[t]he challenged Agency Actions will not be relied on in any way by Defendants including by way of seeking to enforce its substance through [the Department of Education] or [the Department of Justice] civil rights enforcement procedures.”

    Topics:

    Admissions | Discrimination, Accommodation, & Diversity | Diversity in Employment | Faculty & Staff | Financial Aid, Scholarships, & Student Loans | Race and National Origin Discrimination | Students

  • Date:

    Young Americans for Freedom, et al. v. Department of Education (8th Cir. Feb. 17, 2026)  

    Plaintiffs’ Motion to Voluntarily Dismiss Appeal. Plaintiffs, the Young Americans for Freedom, sought an injunction prohibiting the Department of Education from utilizing race eligibility criteria to award grants for the Ronald E. McNair Postbaccalaureate Achievement Program. The district court denied the motion, finding that plaintiffs lacked standing because they failed to include the relevant higher education institutionswhich control applicant selection, not the Department. Plaintiffs appealed the denial of their request for an injunction to the Eighth Circuit but before the court could render a decision, the parties agreed to drop the lawsuit. In requesting the court to dismiss the case, the motion highlights (1) the Department’s determination that the program’s race eligibility criteria is unconstitutional and (2) it’s commitment to rescinding the race criteria in an upcoming rulemaking.  

    Topics:

    Constitutional Issues | Discrimination, Accommodation, & Diversity | Equal Protection | Financial Aid, Scholarships, & Student Loans | Race and National Origin Discrimination | Students

  • Date:

    OCR Investigation of Louisiana Board of Regents Over Alleged Race-Based Priority in Master Plan (Feb. 13, 2026)

    The Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights (OCR) announced that it has initiated a directed investigation into the Louisiana Board of Regents to determine whether its Master Plan for Higher Education violates Title VI by authorizing “racially-exclusionary” practices and initiatives. Specifically, OCR alleges the Board’s executive budgets have included performance objectives requiring schools to prioritize non-white and non-Asian students and sets a target to raise matriculation and graduation of these students from a baseline of 14,579 in 2020–21 to 16,000 in 2025–26. OCR wrote that this objective to “prioritize recruitment and graduation efforts for all races other than white and Asian appears to blatantly violate not only America’s antidiscrimination laws but our nation’s core principles.”

    Topics:

    Admissions | Discrimination, Accommodation, & Diversity | Enforcement of Non-Discrimination Laws | Race and National Origin Discrimination | Students

  • Date:

    Kilborn v. Amiridis, et al. (N.D. Ill. Feb. 9, 2026)

    Opinion Denying in Part Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss. Plaintiff, a tenured professor at the University of Illinois Chicago School of Law, sued several university officials bringing First Amendment retaliation, Fourteenth Amendment due process, and state law defamation claims after an internal investigation concluded that he violated the school’s nondiscrimination policy based on an exam hypothetical referencing racial slurs, racially insensitive classroom remarks, and intimidating comments he made in response to student criticismThe court denied defendants’ motion to dismiss plaintiff’s First Amendment retaliation claim, holding that it fell within the Ex parte Young exception to Eleventh Amendment immunity because plaintiff sought prospective relief in the form of expungement of the investigation findings from his employment record. However, the court dismissed plaintiff’s Fourteenth Amendment due process claims, finding that he had no entitlement to the 2% merit raise he claimed was withheld and that reputational harm alone did not establish a constitutional liberty interest. The court also dismissed plaintiff’s defamation claims based on an internal investigation findings letter that stated plaintiff had used racial slurs, denounced minorities participation in civil rights, and had referred to minorities as “cockroaches. The court concluded that those statements were “non-actionable” because a transcript confirmed plaintiff had, in fact, made those statements – and truth was a defense to defamationBut the court allowed the plaintiff’s other defamation claims to proceed, finding statements that plaintiff had engaged in race-based harassment, intimidated or threatened students, created fears of physical safety or retaliation, and made inappropriate comments in class coulreasonably be construed as objectively verifiable. 

    Topics:

    Constitutional Issues | Discrimination, Accommodation, & Diversity | Due Process | Faculty & Staff | First Amendment & Free Speech | Race and National Origin Discrimination | Retaliation

  • Date:

    Gross v. Univ. of Toledo (N.D. Ohio Jan. 29, 2026)

    Opinion Denying Defendant’s Motion to Dismiss. Plaintiff, a former faculty member and DEI Officer for the University of Toledo, brought Title VII discrimination and retaliation claims against the universityalleging the university failed to address his complaints of discriminatory conduct from his coworkersand that he resigned in “utter frustration” after receiving a letter terminating his contractIn denying the university’s motion to dismiss, the court held that plaintiff was timely in exhausting his administrative remedies, finding that the university’s January 2024 termination letter did not constitute a final adverse employment action for purposes of triggering the 300-day EEOC filing period because (1) the letter stated that plaintiff’s Department Chair could reverse the decision, and (2the termination was contingent on whether plaintiff “modified his behavior.” Instead, the court found that thoperative adverse action occurred at the time of plaintiff’s resignationwhich the court determined to be a constructive discharge based on the allegations in his complaint, including that (1) his complaints of discrimination were ignored; (2) he was discouraged from complaining further; and (3) the discriminatory conduct kept him from performing his assigned duties.  

    Topics:

    Discrimination, Accommodation, & Diversity | Gender Identity & Sexual Orientation Discrimination | Race and National Origin Discrimination | Retaliation

  • Date:

    American Association of University Professors, et al., v. Marco Rubio, et al., (D. Mass. Jan. 22, 2026)

    Annotated Judgment Vacating Defendants’ Enforcement Policy. Following a September ruling that the government’s enforcement policy implementing Executive Orders 14161 and 14188, violated the First Amendment and the Administrative Procedure Act (APA), the court issued an annotated judgment, declaring the enforcement policy “OF NO EFFECT, VOID, ILLEGAL, SET ASIDE, AND VACATED.” Further, pursuant to its equitable powers, the court imposed a “remedial sanction” that allows affected noncitizen members of the plaintiffs’ organizations to challenge adverse immigration actions, shifting the burden to the government to prove by clear and convincing evidence that such actions were not retaliatory or were otherwise lawful, while automatically staying removal during litigation.

    Topics:

    Constitutional Issues | Discrimination, Accommodation, & Diversity | First Amendment & Free Speech | Race and National Origin Discrimination | Religious Discrimination & Accommodation

  • Date:

    Davis v. Univ. of Toledo (6th Cir. Jan. 22, 2026)

    Opinion Affirming Summary Judgment for Defendant. Plaintiff, the former Chief Human Resources Officer for the University of Toledo, sued the university under Title VII for race discrimination and retaliation after she was terminated based on poor performance and was subsequently replaced by two white administrators. The district court granted the university’s motion for summary judgment, finding (1) plaintiff’s race discrimination claim failed because she was unable to demonstrate pretext and (2) her retaliation claim failed because she had not exhausted her administrative remedies with the Ohio Civil Rights Commission. The Sixth Circuit affirmed, holding that plaintiff failed to show the university’s stated reason for termination was pretextual, given the record of plaintiff’s significant and sustained performance deficiencies, compliance failures, mishandling of a collective bargaining agreement, hiring delays, and high turnover among Human Resources leadership.

    Topics:

    Discrimination, Accommodation, & Diversity | Race and National Origin Discrimination

  • Date:

    American Federation of Teachers, et al., v. U.S. Department of Education, et al. (4th Cir. Jan. 21, 2026)

    The Department of Education dropped its appeal of an August 2025 federal court ruling that blocked the Department’s February 14, 2025 Dear Colleague Letter and a related requirement that school districts certify they do not engage in “illegal DEI” practices. With this withdrawal, the district court’s decision will stand.

    Topics:

    Admissions | Constitutional Issues | Discrimination, Accommodation, & Diversity | Diversity in Employment | Due Process | Financial Aid, Scholarships, & Student Loans | First Amendment & Free Speech | Race and National Origin Discrimination | Students