FILTERS



Find by DATE
Reset

Latest Cases & Developments


  • Date:

    Department of Labor Releases AI Literacy Framework (Feb. 13, 2026)

    The Department of Labor announced that it has published a framework for artificial intelligence (AI) literacy to serve as a resource for program design and encourage expanded AI literacy training across the public workforce and education systems.

    Topics:

    Data Privacy | Privacy & Transparency | Technology | Technology Accessibility

  • Date:

    American Association of University Professors, et al. v. Trump, et al. (9th Cir. Feb. 12, 2026)

    The Trump Administration dropped its appeal of a November 2025 federal court injunction ordering the government to restore all previously canceled grants to UCLA and prohibiting it from withholding or conditioning federal funds or imposing penalties in connection with any civil rights investigations or violations of Title VI, VII, or IX. Under the agreement, the administration can still pursue a voluntary resolution agreement with the university if pursued as part of a lawful civil rights investigation. With this joint notice of dismissing the appeal, the district court’s decision will stand.  

    Topics:

    Contracts | Grants, Contracts, & Sponsored Research | Research

  • Date:

    Department of Education Releases Latest Foreign Funding Disclosures (Feb. 11, 2026)

    The Department of Education released new data on its updated foreign gift reporting portal. For 2025, universities reported more than 8,300 foreign gifts and contracts totaling more than $5.2 billion. The disclosures identify Qatar (over $1.1 billion), the United Kingdom (over $633 million), China (over $528 million), Switzerland (over $451 million), Japan (over $374 million), Germany (over $292 million), and Saudi Arabia (over $285 million) as the largest foreign sources of reportable gifts and contracts to American universities. The Department’s new portal is designed to make information more readily accessible to the public and provides aggregate foreign funding totals dating back to 1986, although these totals are not disaggregated by year.

    Topics:

    Endowments & Gifts | International Ventures | Research | Taxes & Finances

  • 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:

    Kessinger v. West Virginia State University (S.D. W.Va. Feb. 6, 2026) 

    Opinion Granting Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment. Plaintiff, a former music instructor for West Virginia University, sued the university alleging violation of procedural due process, Title IX retaliation, and state law claims after she was placed on administrative leave based on allegations of her making sexually explicit comments to students during class, rehearsal, office hours, and allegations of unprofessional behavior during a choir trip. The court found that the university was entitled to Eleventh Amendment immunity and further held that the individual defendants within their official capacities did not violate procedural due process because plaintiff received notice of the allegations, a written investigation letter outlining her rights, and an opportunity to respond before being suspended. The court also dismissed her Title IX retaliation claims, finding that she had not engaged in protected activity under Title IX, as she was the subject, not the complainant, of the investigationAfter dismissing all federal claims, the court declined to exercise supplemental jurisdiction and remanded the remaining state-law claims to state court.  

    Topics:

    Constitutional Issues | Due Process | Employee Sexual Misconduct | Retaliation | Sex Discrimination

  • Date:

    National Association of Diversity Officers in Higher Education, et al., v. Donald J. Trump, et al., (4th Cir. Feb. 6, 2026)

    Opinion Vacating the Preliminary Injunction and Remanding for Further Consideration. Plaintiffs, the National Association of Diversity Officers in Higher Education, the American Association of University Professors, and others, challenged the Trump Administration’s Executive Orders on DEI claiming, inter alia, the executive orders’ certification and termination provisions were overbroad, vague, and chilled protected speech in violation of the First and Fifth Amendment. In February 2025, a district court in Maryland issued a nationwide preliminary injunction, finding plaintiffs were likely to succeed in showing that (1) the certification and termination provisions violated the First and Fifth Amendment, (2) the plaintiffs and similar non-parties were likely to suffer irreparable harm as a result of the EOs; and (3) the balance of equities and the public interest favored issuing a preliminary injunction. On appeal, the Fourth Circuit disagreed and vacated the injunction, finding plaintiffs’ facial challenge to the executive orders’ termination and certification provisions was unlikely to succeed. With respect to the termination provision, the court concluded it was “nothing more than ‘an outward-facing’ policy directive from the President to his agents,” noting that nothing in provision’s “plain text” terminated any contracts or directly regulated any non-governmental conduct.  Finding the plaintiff’s reliance on enforcement evidence “blur[ed] the line” between a facial and as-applied challenge, the court clarified that if grants were terminated, “without regard to their legality, then plaintiffs can sue those actors for terminating those contracts.” Turning to the certification provision, the court found that the plain language of the provision “requires only that plaintiffs certify compliance with federal antidiscrimination laws, which the First Amendment doesn’t confer a right to violate.” While noting it was “bound by the text” in rejecting plaintiffs’ facial challenge to the provision, the court clarified once again, that if the president or his subordinates misinterpreted federal antidiscrimination law, plaintiffs were free to “challenge that interpretation in a specific enforcement action.”

    Topics:

    Diversity in Employment | Faculty & Staff

  • Date:

    Grant et al., v. Chapman University (Cal. App. Feb. 5, 2026)

    Opinion Affirming Summary Judgment for the Defendant. Plaintiffs, former students at Chapman University, sued the university for breach of contract, unjust enrichment, and unfair business practices seeking a partial tuition refund after it ceased in-person instruction and closed campus facilities during the COVID-19 pandemic. The trial court granted the university’s motion for summary judgment, holding that plaintiffs’ “general expectations for in-person classes” was not reflective of a “specific, binding promise.” On appeal, the court affirmed, reasoning that even though the university publications included statements that “listed class locations and touted on-campus facilities and ‘face-to-face contact’ with faculty,” the statements were “not sufficiently ‘specific’ to constitute enforceable implied promises.”

    Topics:

    Campus Police, Safety, & Crisis Management | Coronavirus

  • Date:

    Department of Education Issues Guidance Regarding FERPA Obligations (Feb. 5, 2026)

    The Department of Education’s Student Privacy Policy Office (SPPO) announced that it has launched an investigation into Tufts University and the National Student Clearinghouse (NSC) for potential violations of the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA) based on the National Study of Learning, Voting, and Engagement (NSLVE). In addition to initiating an investigation, the Department issued guidance to all institutions of higher education clarifying their obligations under FERPA to maintain student data privacy and the consequences of noncompliance. The new guidance rescinds all guidance and polices from the Biden administration that encouraged participation in the NSLVE. The guidance further states that SPPO believes that NSLVE use of student data may not qualify for the “studies exception” and advises institutions to wait until the Department completes its investigation before using any NSLVE reports or data to avoid the risk of violating FERPA.

    Topics:

    Data Privacy | Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA) | Privacy & Transparency

  • Date:

    McCoul v. The Texas A&M University System, et al., (S.D. Tex. Feb. 4, 2026)

    Complaint for Declaratory Relief and Damages. Plaintiff, a former senior lecturer in English Literature for Texas A&M University, sued the university and several campus officials alleging violation of her First Amendment and Due Process rights after the university terminated her for “failing to modify her course content” to exclude content related to gender identity. Plaintiff claims that the university’s purported reason for her termination was pretextual because she was never told she was required to modify her course content and was, in fact, due to political backlash that followed a classroom video recording of a student objecting to the course content, which went viral. Plaintiff further claims that the university violated her due process rights when it failed to follow its own policies for dismissal, which required the university to provide notice of the charges, an opportunity to respond, and a hearing. She also alleges her rights were violated when the university ignored findings of the university’s Academic Freedom Council, which determined she “was fired for the content of her class,” and findings of its faculty appeals hearing body, which held the university had not demonstrated her dismal was for good cause.

    Topics:

    Academic Freedom & Employee Speech | Constitutional Issues | Due Process | Faculty & Staff | First Amendment & Free Speech

  • Date:

    Fridley Public School District, et al., v. Kristi Noem, et al., (D. Minn. Feb. 4, 2026)

    Complaint for Declaratory and Injunctive Relief. Plaintiffs, a coalition of school districts and a teachers union, sued the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), and several federal officials, alleging that the implementation of the policy “Operation Metro Surge” in addition to the rescission of the previous longstanding “sensitive locations policy” violate the Administrative Procedure Act (APA) as arbitrary and capricious. Plaintiffs allege that the increase of ICE action at both K-12 schools and college campuses violate the rights of immigrants and create substantial disruption to the lives of U.S. citizens, noting that they have seen attendance declines of more than a third since the surge began. Plaintiffs further allege that the threat of enforcement has created a chilling effect and undermines access to education. Plaintiffs seek to permanently enjoin DHS from enforcing the new policy and to prohibit DHS agents from conducting immigration enforcement actions within 1,000 feet of school property or a school bus stop.

    Topics:

    Employment of Foreign Nationals | Faculty & Staff | Immigration | International Students