On March 17, 2022, Dr. Shaun Harper took to social media to share a personal career announcement that had lots of people talking, both inside and outside of education.
Harper told his thousands of followers that come May 2023, he was planning to step away from the USC Race and Equity Center, the national research center he founded that works, as its website indicates, “to illuminate, disrupt, and dismantle racism in all forms,” while “eradicating sexism, xenophobia, islamophobia, antisemitism, ageism, ableism, sizeism, and other engines of human suffering.”
Dr. Shaun Harper
Ask Harper if he still feels that way today, and his answer is a resounding yes. Yet, five months after he vowed to step away as the leader of the center that has been catapulted to national heights, he’s still at the helm, taking a surgical approach to cementing the center’s structure and enduring legacy.
“I feel a sense of responsibility to the organization that I created and to all the people that it serves – not just the 29 people who work here, but also the hundreds of companies, universities, and school districts that we’re working with,” says Harper in an interview with Diverse. “I just know in my gut that it wouldn’t be right to walk away from the center without doing more to ensure its future.”
Building beyond higher education