The Ecosystem We Have Not Built: What the HERD Survey Tells Us About HBCU Research Infrastructure

When you can do the common things of life in an uncommon way, you will command the attention of the world. – George Washington Carver

In Washington, the phrase “support for HBCUs” has become one of the most reliable applause lines in American political life. Presidents invoke it. Appropriations committees cite it. Press releases are issued, summits are convened, and photographs are taken with smiling institutional presidents. And then, year after year, the National Center for Science and Engineering Statistics releases the Higher Education Research and Development (HERD) Survey, the most comprehensive longitudinal dataset tracking university research investment in the United States, and the applause gives way to the same uncomfortable arithmetic.

In FY 2024, 59 HBCUs and affiliated institutions spent a combined $929.2 million on research and development. That is a large number in isolation. It is a devastating number in context. The total national higher education R&D enterprise that same year amounted to $117.7 billion. HBCUs accounted for 0.79% of it which is less than eight-tenths of one percent of the nation’s research investment, for institutions that produce a disproportionate share of Black STEM graduates, pre-medical students, and humanities scholars. The gap between what this figure is and what it should be is not a rounding error. It is a policy failure of the first order. But before laying the entirety of that failure at Washington’s feet, it is worth asking a harder question: how much of it is also self-inflicted?

What is worse than the current number is the trajectory. In 2015, the HBCU share of national R&D stood at 0.82%. In 2024, it stands at 0.79%. Ten years, three presidencies, dozens of executive orders, and multiple congressional funding packages later, the needle has moved — backward. The absolute dollar figures have grown, from $565.8 million in 2015 to $929.2 million in 2024, an increase of roughly 64% over the decade. But that growth is illusory when measured against the expansion of the national enterprise itself. The entire higher education R&D sector grew from $68.7 billion to $117.7 billion over the same period, an increase of 71%. HBCUs did not keep pace. They ran, and the field ran faster.

This is not a partisan observation. The data is indifferent to party affiliation. Under the Obama administration in FY 2015, HBCUs held a 0.82% share. By FY 2016, Obama’s final full year, it had slipped to 0.80%. Under the first Trump administration, the share fell steadily from 0.75% in 2017 to a decade-low of 0.63% in 2020. The Biden era produced the strongest absolute growth — $929 million in 2024 against $542 million in 2020 — but even at its peak, the Biden era only recovered the share to 0.79%, still below the Obama-era baseline. No administration has treated parity as a governing imperative. No Congress has appropriated at the scale the problem requires.

The HERD data makes the scale of the problem legible in a way that press releases cannot obscure. To reach just 1% of national R&D investment, a number that is not ambitious but merely honest, given that HBCUs serve a population roughly 15% of the total undergraduate student body, annual HBCU research expenditures would need to reach $1.18 billion, a gap of $248 million from current levels. To reach 2%, still proportionally below HBCU enrollment weight, the number is $2.35 billion, a gap of more than $1.4 billion annually. At 5%, which is arguably the minimum threshold for serious institutional research competitiveness, the annual requirement rises to $5.89 billion. These are not fantastical projections. They are the arithmetic of what it costs to matter in the modern knowledge economy.

There is one additional data point that every HBCU president, board member, alumni association chair, and development officer should be required to sit with before any other conversation about strategy begins. In FY 2024, 39 individual PWIs each spent more on research and development than all 59 HBCUs combined. Not more per institution. More in total more than $929 million apiece, individually, at 39 separate universities, while the entire organized HBCU sector could not collectively match what any one of them spent alone. Johns Hopkins, the perennial top-ranked research university, spent $4.1 billion on R&D in FY 2024, an amount more than four times the combined output of every HBCU in the country. But Johns Hopkins is not the only comparison that should give pause. The University of Pennsylvania spent $2.2 billion, an amount more than twice the entire HBCU sector. The University of California San Francisco spent $2.1 billion. The University of Michigan spent $2.1 billion. The University of Wisconsin-Madison spent $1.9 billion. These are not the top five institutions in the country by research output simply because they are wealthier or more selective than HBCUs in some abstract sense. They are the top five because they decided, at an institutional level, that research was the primary mechanism through which a university generates long-term power — economic, political, and reputational — and they built accordingly. Each of those five institutions, on its own, individually outspends every HBCU in America combined by a factor of two or more. Ohio State. Texas A&M. These are not exotic outliers. Several of them are state universities with public missions not fundamentally dissimilar from many HBCUs. The difference is not that their researchers are more talented or their communities more deserving. The difference is that somewhere in their institutional histories, research became the mission not a supplement to it. That reorientation produced decades of compounding returns. HBCUs are still debating whether to begin.

The external funding gap is real. But it exists alongside and is partly enabled by a pattern of institutional self-neglect that the HBCU sector has been reluctant to examine with full candor. Too many HBCU administrations, particularly those overseeing graduate programs, have treated research not as a strategic priority but as a grant-chasing appendage: a necessary line item for federal reporting, a credential for accreditation purposes, something the provost manages while the president attends to enrollment and donor relations. The result is an institutional culture in which research infrastructure is perpetually undercapitalized, grant offices are understaffed, and the graduate school — the engine of every serious research university — is treated as a placeholder for undergraduates (the bulk of most HBCU graduate schools are their own undergraduates) rather than the economic generator it is designed to be. This is not an abstraction. It shows up directly in the HERD rankings.

Howard University, the flagship of HBCU research activity, spent $101.8 million in FY 2024, ranking 178th nationally. North Carolina A&T, which has made the most deliberate institutional bet on STEM research, spent $81.8 million and ranked 192nd. Morehouse School of Medicine spent $68.7 million and ranked 212th. Florida A&M spent $68.7 million and ranked 213th. These are the top tier four institutions spending a combined $321 million out of the sector’s $929 million total. The other 55 institutions divided the remaining $608 million, an average of just $11 million each. And that average flatters the distribution considerably. Grambling State University, one of the most storied names in HBCU history, spent $486,000 in FY 2024, ranked 811th nationally, in the 13th percentile. Shaw University spent $452,000. Coppin State spent $304,000. Mississippi Valley State spent $161,000. Jarvis Christian College spent $150,000. These are institutions with graduate programs, loyal alumni networks, and deep community roots. The research numbers they are producing are not the result of limited potential. They are the result of limited prioritization. There is a meaningful distinction between the two, and the sector has been too comfortable blurring it.

The comparison with peer land-grant and regional public universities is instructive and uncomfortable. A regional public university with comparable enrollment to Morgan State or Tennessee State will typically have a dedicated technology transfer office, a research commercialization incubator, multiple endowed research chairs, and a graduate school that is explicitly linked to the institution’s strategic revenue plan. These are not luxuries at those institutions. They are understood as core infrastructure. At too many HBCUs, they remain aspirational bullet points in strategic plans that are never fully funded.

The institutional neglect of research infrastructure does not exist in a vacuum. It is reinforced and in many ways perpetuated by a philanthropic culture among HBCU alumni that directs dollars toward the visible and the sentimental rather than the strategic. Ask an HBCU alumni association what its fundraising priorities are, and the answers are predictable: scholarships, athletics, the marching band, campus beautification, the homecoming experience. These are not illegitimate priorities. Scholarships keep students enrolled. A great homecoming is an institutional identity statement. But they are not the investments that build research universities, and the gap between where HBCU alumni philanthropy flows and where HBCU research infrastructure requires investment is one of the most consequential misalignments in Black institutional life.

The problem is structural and informational. HBCU alumni, by and large, do not know what their institutions’ research portfolios look like. They do not know that their alma mater ranks in the 13th percentile of national research expenditures. They do not know that the graduate school is operating without a dedicated technology licensing office. They have never been presented with a case for why endowing a research chair in computational biology or environmental science would generate more long-term institutional value than another scholarship fund. No one has made that case to them, because the institutions themselves have not fully internalized it. PWI alumni are regularly presented with precisely this framing. Major research universities run sophisticated campaigns explaining to their donor bases that an endowed professorship creates a permanent research income stream, that a gift to a technology commercialization fund can generate licensing revenue that multiplies the original gift, that an investment in graduate fellowships attracts research talent that then generates grant overhead that funds the next generation of infrastructure. The cause-and-effect chain from donation to institutional research capacity to economic output is laid out explicitly. HBCU development offices have, with notable exceptions, not made this case. The result is that HBCU alumni who are themselves scientists, engineers, physicians, and entrepreneurs give generously to scholarships while their institutions’ research infrastructure atrophies. They are loyal donors funding an incomplete vision of what their institutions could be.

The competitive gap is widening not only in research expenditure but in the commercialization infrastructure that converts research into institutional wealth and nowhere is that gap more nakedly visible than in patent production. The National Academy of Inventors publishes an annual ranking of U.S. universities by utility patents granted. In 2024, the University of California system led the country with 540 patents. MIT produced 295. The University of Texas system produced 234. Purdue produced 213. Stanford produced 199. Not one HBCU appears anywhere in the top 100. Not Howard. Not NC A&T. Not Florida A&M. The list runs to 100 institutions and ends with universities holding 14 patents each. HBCUs could not place a single institution on it. This is not incidental. It is the downstream consequence of four and a half decades of abdication from the commercialization economy that the Bayh-Dole Act of 1980 made available to every research university in America. That legislation gave universities ownership of discoveries made with federal research funding — a structural gift that created the legal architecture for technology licensing offices, spinoff companies, and the university-based venture ecosystem that now anchors the innovation economies of entire regions. MIT’s technology licensing office has generated billions in cumulative revenue and been instrumental in creating hundreds of companies. Stanford’s equivalent has returned substantial royalty income to its operating budget and endowment for decades. The institutions that built aggressive commercialization infrastructure around Bayh-Dole are now compounding institutional wealth at a rate that has nothing to do with tuition receipts or annual federal appropriations. HBCUs have largely been bystanders to this transformation for forty-five years. Every year that an HBCU produces federally funded research without a pipeline for commercializing it is a year in which intellectual property that legally belongs to the institution is effectively abandoned. The patents are not filed. The licensing agreements are not negotiated. The spinoff companies are not formed. The wealth that research can generate, wealth that is independent of enrollment cycles, tuition sensitivity, and federal political winds is left on the table. When a major technology company funds a research center at MIT or Carnegie Mellon, it is making an investment in an ecosystem that has already demonstrated the capacity to convert that investment into commercially viable output. That ecosystem produced Google. It produced Genentech. It produced the foundational patents behind industries that did not exist a generation ago. The question for HBCUs is not how to be invited into that ecosystem. Invitation is not the goal, and dependence on the goodwill of institutions that have never prioritized Black wealth creation is not a strategy. The goal is to build a parallel ecosystem; one anchored in HBCU research infrastructure, capitalized through the African diaspora, and oriented toward producing the companies, the patents, and the intellectual property that generate Black institutional wealth on a generational time horizon. The African American community has spending power measured in the trillions. The African continent represents one of the fastest-growing concentrations of capital and technological ambition in the world. The Caribbean and broader diaspora hold resources, networks, and markets that no MIT spinoff has been designed to serve. An HBCU-anchored research commercialization ecosystem, built in genuine partnership with diaspora capital rather than in perpetual petition to federal appropriators, is the architecture through which an African American-owned Google becomes imaginable not as aspiration, but as institutional output. Stanford did not produce Google because it got lucky. It produced Google because it had spent decades building the research infrastructure, the technology transfer capacity, the graduate talent pipelines, and the investor relationships that made commercializable discovery an institutional inevitability rather than an accident. HBCUs have the community. They have the talent. They have, in the diaspora, a potential capital base that dwarfs what most research universities could claim at the moment they began building. What they have not yet built is the infrastructure that converts all of that latent capacity into compounding institutional power. That is the work. And it cannot begin until the sector decides that research is not an afterthought it is the foundation.

None of that ecosystem can be built, however, if the students arriving at HBCU research programs have spent their entire academic formation inside institutions that treated STEM as an afterthought. The research university does not begin at the graduate school. It begins at the pipeline that feeds it. The elite PWI research institutions that dominate the HERD rankings and the NAI patent list are not drawing their graduate talent from underfunded schools with overextended teachers and no competition culture. They are drawing from Phillips Exeter, Phillips Andover, and the constellation of elite preparatory institutions that have spent generations building exactly the kind of STEM competition infrastructure (doctoral-level coaches, state-of-the-art laboratories, national Olympiad pipelines) that produces the researchers who then generate the patents and the companies. The African American community once had more than 100 Black boarding schools. Four remain. The collapse of that infrastructure is not unrelated to the HERD data. It is part of the same story. Rebuilding a network of elite Black private day schools and boarding schools institutions explicitly designed as STEM pipelines into HBCUs and from HBCUs into the research economy is not a separate conversation from the one this article is having. It is the upstream chapter of it. An HBCU research ecosystem capable of producing commercially viable intellectual property requires a feeder system that has been preparing Black students for that level of scientific culture since before they arrive on campus. The Eight Schools Association does not produce Intel Science Fair winners by accident. Neither will HBCUs produce the next generation of research scientists, patent-holders, and technology entrepreneurs without building the institutional infrastructure that makes that outcome systematic rather than exceptional.

The deepest problem, however, is one that no federal grant program and no alumni campaign can solve on its own. It is a problem of institutional identity. Research at most HBCUs is understood as the work of a specific class of people: faculty with PhDs, graduate students, grant administrators. It is not understood as the work of the institution. This is a fundamentally impoverished conception of what a research university is, and it has real consequences for both the quantity and the quality of what gets produced. The most research-intensive universities in the world do not operate this way. At institutions where research is genuinely central to the mission, the orientation pervades the entire organization. The facilities management team understands that their work maintains the physical infrastructure on which research depends. Procurement staff understand that how they manage equipment acquisition and vendor relationships affects the cost-efficiency of the research enterprise. The administrative staff in grant offices understand themselves as investigators’ partners, not their compliance monitors. The groundskeepers and custodial staff who maintain the physical environment of laboratories and research spaces are part of an institution that takes seriously what happens inside those spaces. This is not sentimentality. It is operational culture. And it is the difference between institutions that treat research as a revenue center and those that treat it as a credential.

For HBCUs, the argument for this kind of whole-institution research identity is not merely operational. It is strategic and historical. The communities that HBCUs were built to serve have profound, unmet research needs: in environmental health, in medical outcomes, in economic development, in urban infrastructure, in food systems, in financial services. The proximity of HBCUs to those communities — geographic, cultural, institutional — is itself a competitive research advantage that no PWI can fully replicate. Community-engaged research, participatory research models, place-based longitudinal studies of Black American communities — these are areas in which HBCUs have natural authority. But capitalizing on that authority requires treating research as a whole-institution commitment, not a departmental function. It means building research literacy across every level of the institution. It means having honest conversations, from the boardroom to the grounds crew, about what research is, why it matters, and what the institution loses every year it is treated as secondary. Not because every employee will write a journal article, but because institutional culture is built through shared understanding of institutional purpose. When everyone connected to a campus understands that its long-term capacity to serve its community is tied to its research productivity, the institution begins to function differently. Budget priorities shift. Hiring decisions reflect research capacity. Alumni giving conversations expand beyond the sentimental to the strategic.

The institutions already gaining ground demonstrate the model. Morgan State’s growth from $13.6 million in 2015 to $55.5 million in 2024 — a 309% increase — did not come from waiting on Washington. It came from deciding that research was a strategic priority and building the administrative infrastructure to compete for it. Winston-Salem State’s 840% growth over the same period came from targeting federal health research dollars with institutional precision. Delaware State nearly tripled its portfolio. These trajectories prove the capacity exists.

There are also signs that the sector is beginning to grasp the coordination imperative. On April 29, 2026, fifteen HBCUs announced the formation of the Association of HBCU Research Institutions (AHRI), a national coalition explicitly designed to accelerate research capacity, increase the number of HBCUs achieving R1 Carnegie Classification, and expand collective policy influence. The founding membership includes Howard, the sector’s only R1 institution, alongside thirteen R2 institutions: Clark Atlanta, Delaware State, Florida A&M, Hampton, Jackson State, Morgan State, NC A&T, Prairie View A&M, South Carolina State, Southern University, Tennessee State, Texas Southern, and Virginia State. Collectively, AHRI’s members account for roughly half of all competitively awarded federal research funding among HBCUs. The coalition is co-located with the Association of American Universities and has secured a three-year, $1 million grant from Harvard’s Legacy of Slavery initiative, with Harvard’s Office of the Vice Provost for Research providing technical assistance. The formation of AHRI is the most substantive structural move the HBCU research sector has made in a generation, and it deserves to be recognized as such. But one million dollars over three years, measured against a sector-wide research gap of hundreds of millions annually and a patent economy in which HBCUs hold zero of the top 100 positions, is a foundation, not a solution. The significance of AHRI is not the capital it has raised. It is the architecture it represents — fifteen institutions deciding that isolation is no longer a viable strategy. If that architecture is built upon seriously, capitalized at the scale the HERD data demands, and extended to the 44 HBCU/PBI institutions not yet in the coalition, it becomes the organizational infrastructure through which the ecosystem this article has described can actually be constructed. If it becomes another announcement without a follow-through funding strategy, the HERD Survey will record the same story in 2034 that it has recorded every year since 2015.

But the formation of AHRI also demands a harder question that the coalition’s announcement did not address: how much genuine institutional autonomy do its member institutions actually have? Research strategy is a function of institutional governance. An institution that cannot independently set its research agenda, control its own board appointments, or protect its leadership from politically motivated interference cannot build the kind of sustained, multi-year research infrastructure the HERD data demands regardless of what coalition it joins. This is not a hypothetical concern. Prairie View A&M, one of AHRI’s founding members, operates within the Texas A&M University System, a governance structure in which the flagship institution’s interests, priorities, and resource allocation decisions do not always align with those of a historically Black land-grant whose research mission serves a fundamentally different community. The degree to which Prairie View can pursue an independent research commercialization strategy, build its own technology transfer infrastructure, or make unilateral decisions about patent filing and licensing within that system is a question the coalition’s formation does not resolve. Texas Southern, another AHRI founding member, has experienced more direct interference: its board has been subject to hostile gubernatorial appointments that resulted in the termination of institutional leadership in ways that the broader HBCU community recognized as reflecting political interests rather than institutional ones. Tennessee State has faced comparable dynamics, with the state’s Republican-controlled legislature effectively vacating its board and replacing it with gubernatorial appointees, a maneuver that places the strategic direction of a public HBCU in the hands of an administration with no particular stake in HBCU research excellence. An HBCU that cannot protect its own president, control its own board, or govern its own research agenda is not positioned to build a serious research enterprise regardless of its AHRI membership. The coalition is only as strategically coherent as the institutional autonomy of its members. That autonomy, for several of its founding institutions, is not guaranteed. It is contested.

The structural argument that the data ultimately forces is this: no external actor — no administration, no Congress, no philanthropic initiative operating at current scales — has demonstrated the will to close a gap this large. Replicating and scaling what the sector’s fastest-growing research institutions have done requires HBCU administrations to stop treating their research enterprises as afterthoughts, HBCU alumni to stop treating their philanthropy as sentiment, and HBCU communities to start treating institutional research capacity as what it actually is — a long-term economic and political asset that compounds in value every year it is invested in, and deteriorates every year it is not.

The HERD Survey is updated annually. And annually, the same story is told. The question is whether the institutions that story concerns have finally decided to write a different one.


Data sourced from the National Center for Science and Engineering Statistics, Higher Education R&D Survey (HERD), FY 2015–2024; and the National Academy of Inventors, 2024 Top 100 U.S. Universities Granted U.S. Utility Patents. All HERD expenditure figures are in thousands of current dollars.

Disclaimer: This article was assisted by ClaudeAI.

Is Your HBCU One Of Your Beneficiaries? It Should Be

“Even in death, we must ensure our community can continue to fight.” – William A. Foster, IV

There is a sobering truth that rarely makes its way into alumni banquets or homecoming speeches: many Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs) are one generation away from crisis. Endowments remain modest, the donor base is limited, and institutional wealth gaps widen with each passing decade. Meanwhile, African American household wealth though fragile has produced a generation of professionals who, through homeownership, pensions, and insurance, collectively hold trillions in private assets. The question that must now be asked with urgency is not how much we love our HBCUs, but whether that love has been institutionalized. In simpler terms: Is your HBCU one of your beneficiaries? It should be.

African American baby boomers and Generation Xers are now entering the largest wealth transfer in U.S. history. Estimates from the Federal Reserve suggest that over the next 25 years, more than $70 trillion will be passed down across American households. African Americans represent a fraction of that figure, but even 2–3 percent of that total, between $1.4 trillion and $2.1 trillion is transformative if directed strategically. The reality is that most HBCUs will not receive a fraction of that wealth because too few alumni name their alma mater as beneficiaries in wills, trusts, or life insurance policies. For all of the love expressed through donations at homecoming, few alumni are ensuring that their HBCU benefits when they transition from life to legacy.

HBCUs collectively have endowments worth approximately $4 billion, compared to Harvard’s $51 billion or Stanford’s $40 billion. Even if just 10% of HBCU alumni left 5% of their estates to their alma mater, the resulting transfer of wealth could exceed $25 billion in one generation. That is not a pipe dream it is a matter of estate planning.

When most people think of beneficiaries, they think of family such as their children, spouses, grandchildren. This instinct is natural, but legacy is larger than lineage. It is institutional. Wealth without institutional roots evaporates within a generation. We see this across African America, where success stories emerge and vanish with each economic downturn because too few families and individuals tie their personal legacies to lasting institutions. In the European American tradition, universities, hospitals, museums, and foundations regularly appear in wills and trusts. These bequests sometimes modest, sometimes monumental form the lifeblood of institutional continuity. At elite private universities, as much as 40% of annual donations come from estate gifts. For most HBCUs, that figure hovers in the low single digits. That gap is not simply a reflection of wealth; it is a reflection of institutional habits. Too many African American professionals treat giving as an emotional act rather than a structural one. They give to help a student pay tuition, fund a scholarship, or support a campus event. These are vital acts of generosity. But they are also temporary. What our institutions need are permanent capital streams from assets that generate income long after we are gone.

According to a 2022 study by Caring.com, nearly 68% of African American adults do not have a will or estate plan. Among those who do, few include charitable or institutional beneficiaries. The absence of estate planning means that wealth is lost to legal battles, taxes, and disorganization. For HBCUs, it means that the most reliable source of long-term capital—planned giving—remains underdeveloped. The reasons are historical and psychological. Distrust of financial institutions, the trauma of asset seizure and land theft, and the lack of intergenerational financial literacy have all played a role. Many African Americans are the first in their families to accumulate significant assets and remain unsure how to manage or pass them on. HBCUs, too, have not always invested in the infrastructure to cultivate these conversations. Some institutions, such as Howard University and Spelman College, have begun to strengthen their planned giving offices, hiring estate planning specialists and partnering with financial advisors. Yet across the HBCU ecosystem, the field remains thin. Planned giving should not be treated as an auxiliary fundraising effort; it should be embedded in the financial literacy curriculum of every alumni association and business school.

Naming an HBCU as a beneficiary does not require immense wealth. It requires intention. A $10,000 life insurance policy that lists your alma mater as a secondary beneficiary could one day help fund a scholarship. A $25,000 bequest could seed an endowed fund that supports future students in perpetuity. Larger estates could create endowed chairs, faculty development funds, or campus infrastructure projects. For example, consider an alumnus with a $500,000 estate. If 5%—just $25,000 were left to their HBCU, and the school invested it with a conservative 7% annual return, the endowment could grow to nearly $50,000 within a decade. Now multiply that by 10,000 alumni. The cumulative impact becomes transformative: $250 million in new endowment capital. The beauty of estate gifts is that they align individual legacy with institutional longevity. They ensure that the values that shaped one’s life: education, perseverance, and community continue to bear fruit for generations.

Of course, the responsibility is not solely on alumni. HBCUs must meet their graduates halfway. Too often, the institutional conversation around giving begins and ends with short-term fundraising. Planned giving requires education, trust, and infrastructure. Alumni must understand not only how to give but also how their gifts will be managed. Transparency is critical. Each HBCU should maintain a planned giving office or partnership that offers free estate planning workshops for alumni and local communities, works with African American financial planners and attorneys to guide donors through the process, publishes an annual planned giving report showing bequests received and fund performance, and honors those who make such commitments through a “Legacy Society.” Planned giving is not a matter of charity; it is strategic finance. It represents patient capital the kind of long-term, compounding wealth that strengthens an institution’s ability to act with independence.

If an HBCU receives $1 million in bequests each year and invests it with an average annual return of 8%, while spending only 4% annually, the compounding effect over 30 years would result in an endowment of nearly $113 million. That is the quiet power of compound interest combined with institutional stewardship. The more predictable the inflow of legacy gifts, the more financial security an institution has to weather economic downturns, invest in research, and attract top faculty and students. This model has powered Ivy League universities for over a century. Harvard, Yale, and Princeton have each built massive endowments not solely through tuition or annual campaigns but through a continuous pipeline of planned gifts from alumni. The difference between those institutions and HBCUs is not love—it is legacy management.

Too many African American alumni equate love for their alma mater with nostalgia like football games, step shows, and reunions. But love that dies with you is sentiment; love that survives you is strategy. The graduates of HBCUs are living proof of what collective investment can produce. For every dollar given by alumni of the 1940s, 50s, and 60s, generations of students were educated. Yet, the torch cannot be passed if the flame is not fueled. It is time to evolve from a culture of giving back to one of building forward. Planned giving is not about death it is about continuity. It is a declaration that your life’s work and your alma mater’s mission are intertwined.

Every alumnus, regardless of income, can take simple steps today: create or update a will; name their HBCU as a beneficiary of an estate, policy, or specific asset; inform the institution of their intentions; encourage their peers to do the same; and hold their alma mater accountable for transparency. These steps are not just financial they are cultural. They shift African American giving from reactionary to generational.

Imagine if each graduating class pledged that 25% of its members would make their HBCU a beneficiary within ten years. Imagine alumni chapters hosting estate planning events as commonly as they host networking mixers. Imagine faculty and administrators participating themselves, modeling the behavior they encourage. Such a culture would redefine the financial destiny of HBCUs. Each homecoming would represent not just a reunion but an affirmation of generational continuity. Wealth, after all, is not built by what a people earn it is built by what they keep and institutionalize.

Estate giving is not simply a personal act it is a political and economic one. It is a means of resisting the structural forces that have kept African American institutions undercapitalized. It asserts that African America will no longer rely on external philanthropy to sustain its centers of knowledge and leadership. When an alumnus names their HBCU as a beneficiary, they are engaging in quiet revolution. They are transferring not just money, but sovereignty and the ability for African American institutions to define their futures without financial dependence.

HBCUs taught generations of African Americans how to think critically, build careers, and navigate a world that often excluded them. The final lesson those same institutions now teach is about reciprocity and permanence. To include your HBCU in your estate plan is to declare that the education you received was not just for you it was for those yet to come. It is to make your life an endowment for your people’s progress. As W.E.B. Du Bois once wrote, “Education must not simply teach work it must teach life.” The same can be said of giving. Philanthropy must not simply ease today it must ensure tomorrow.

So the next time you review your financial affairs, ask yourself one question: Is your HBCU one of your beneficiaries? If not, then perhaps it is time to make sure the love you feel for your alma mater doesn’t die when you do.

A Framework for Action

Every alumnus, regardless of income, can take the following steps today:

  1. Create or update your will. Even if your estate is modest, formalize it. This prevents unnecessary legal complications and ensures your intentions are respected.
  2. Name your HBCU as a beneficiary. This can be for a percentage of your estate, a specific asset, or a life insurance policy.
  3. Inform your institution. Let them know of your plans so that they can record and steward your legacy appropriately.
  4. Encourage your peers. Alumni networks should normalize estate planning as part of professional and family life.
  5. Hold your HBCU accountable. Ensure transparency in how planned gifts are invested and reported.

These steps are not just financial they are cultural. They shift African American giving from reactionary to generational.

Disclaimer: This article was assisted by ChatGPT.

Delay As Strategy: Why Democrats Must Stall The Federal Reserve Chair Confirmation Until After The 2026 Midterms

If the Democrats can not hold the line of the Federal Reserve’s independence, then America as we know it is over. The U.S. dollar as the world’s reserve currency will be on life support and foreign countries will be expeditious in the pulling of the plug because trust in the U.S. financial system will be no more. – William A. Foster, IV

Jerome Powell leaves the Federal Reserve on May 15th. His likely successor, Kevin Warsh, is a wealthy former governor with convenient monetary views and a notable reluctance to say obvious things plainly. Democrats have the procedural votes to slow his confirmation. Whether they have the institutional will to use them is a different question and the answer matters more than most people realise.

The Federal Reserve does not often feature in discussions of HBCUs. It should. The interest rate at which a small Black-owned bank in Memphis can borrow money, the credit conditions facing a first-generation homeowner in Atlanta, the yield that a university endowment in Alabama can realistically expect on its bond portfolio: all of these are shaped, in ways direct and indirect, by the policy choices made inside the Eccles Building in Washington. The selection of a new Federal Reserve chair is, among other things, a decision about whose economy gets managed.

That is what makes the confirmation of Kevin Warsh, President Donald Trump’s nominee to succeed Jerome Powell, more consequential than the usual Washington pageant of hearings, hedged testimony, and partisan positioning. Warsh appeared before the Senate Banking Committee on April 21st. By the end of the day, a reasonably clear picture had emerged not just of his monetary philosophy, but of his character. It was not a flattering portrait.

Start with the money, because with Warsh the money is unavoidable. Financial disclosure forms filed ahead of the hearing placed his personal holdings at between $135 million and $226 million, concentrated heavily in two positions in the Juggernaut Fund LP, a vehicle associated with billionaire investor Stanley Druckenmiller, for whom Warsh has worked as a partner. His wife, Jane Lauder, granddaughter of cosmetics entrepreneur Estée Lauder, has an estimated personal fortune of around $1.9 billion. By comparison, Jerome Powell, the man Warsh would replace, disclosed assets of roughly $19.5 million, held mostly in index funds and municipal bonds. Ben Bernanke, who chaired the Fed during the 2008 financial crisis, stepped down in 2014 with assets of at most $2.3 million, mostly in retirement accounts. The message encoded in Warsh’s disclosure is not that rich people cannot run central banks. It is that the man who will make decisions about credit access for working Americans has never had occasion to worry about credit access himself.

The hearing did nothing to soften that impression. Warsh was asked, at one point, a question that should not require courage to answer: who won the 2020 presidential election? The answer is documented, certified by Congress, and not remotely in dispute among anyone operating in good faith. Warsh declined to say it plainly. He noted instead that “this body certified that election”—a formulation so carefully calibrated to avoid displeasing the president who nominated him that it managed to be both technically accurate and substantively evasive. Paul Krugman, the Nobel Prize-winning economist, called Warsh Trump’s “sock puppet.” Senator Elizabeth Warren used the same phrase. The comparison is uncharitable. It is also, on the evidence of the hearing, not easily rebutted.

Warsh was equally reluctant to defend Fed Governor Lisa Cook (Spelman), who faces politically motivated scrutiny from the administration, or to express support for Powell, who is the subject of a Justice Department investigation that Republican Senator Thom Tillis of North Carolina has used as a pretext to block Warsh’s own confirmation vote—a piece of procedural irony that illuminates just how thoroughly this nomination has been consumed by partisan mechanics. A nominee unable to defend his soon-to-be colleagues from transparently political attacks is, at minimum, a nominee who has chosen to demonstrate that loyalty to the president outranks loyalty to the institution he is asking to lead.

What might a Warsh-led Federal Reserve actually look like? The hearing offered some clues, and they are worth examining seriously rather than dismissing as political noise. The Council on Foreign Relations, reviewing his stated priorities, identified three broad themes: a return to the Fed’s core mandate of price stability and maximum employment, a stricter approach to inflation targeting, and a reduced reliance on quantitative easing and forward guidance. None of these is inherently unreasonable as a policy preference. The question is how they interact with the distributional realities of the American economy.

When the Federal Reserve tightens monetary conditions, raises interest rates, reduces the supply of credit, the effects are not equally distributed. Large corporations with investment-grade credit ratings refinance their debt through instruments that most individuals never encounter. Small businesses, particularly those operating in underserved communities with thinner banking relationships, find that credit simply disappears, or becomes prohibitively expensive. Families with secure equity in their homes can ride out a tightening cycle. Families trying to enter the housing market for the first time, often with smaller down payments and less financial buffer, are priced out. African American households, for reasons rooted in decades of discriminatory lending, exclusion from wartime wealth-building programmes, and constrained intergenerational asset transfer, are disproportionately represented in that second group. They enter recessions earlier, recover later, and bear more of the cost of monetary medicine administered for conditions they did not cause.

HBCUs sit at the intersection of several of these vulnerabilities. They operate with endowments that are, on average, a fraction of those at comparable predominantly white institutions partly because their alumni were, for generations, systematically excluded from the wealth accumulation that fuels philanthropic giving. They educate a student population that carries above-average debt loads into a labour market that does not always reward them proportionally. And despite the existence of a network of Black-owned banks and Minority Depository Institutions across the South and Midwest, only two HBCUs currently bank with Black-owned financial institutions. The rest rely on large money-center banks—the same institutions with documented histories of predatory lending to African American borrowers and communities. The irony is structural: HBCUs are among the most visible anchors of African American institutional life, yet their banking relationships run through the very sector that has most consistently extracted wealth from the communities they serve. The monetary environment matters to HBCUs not as a background condition but as an operational reality, and the institutions managing their accounts have rarely been the ones most attentive to their interests.

Into this context arrives a nominee who has, according to an analysis by Employ America, a nonpartisan inflation research group, demonstrated a pattern of supporting tight money when Democrats hold the White House and easy money when Republicans do. Warsh has also expressed the view that productivity gains from artificial intelligence could justify lower interest rates than would otherwise be warranted. That is a philosophically coherent position, though it happens to align precisely with what the current administration has made clear it wants: lower rates, delivered promptly. The convergence of Warsh’s stated views with the president’s stated preferences is, one might say, remarkable in its consistency.

All of which brings the discussion to the Senate, and to the question of what Democrats should do with the leverage they currently possess. The arithmetic is not complicated. Invoking cloture, the procedural step that ends debate and allows a confirmation vote, requires 60 votes. Republicans hold 53 seats. Democrats, including two independents who caucus with them, hold 47. That is more than enough to block confirmation indefinitely. Not to delay it. To block it. The mechanism differs from the Garland blockade when Republicans held the majority in 2016 and simply refused to schedule hearings; Democrats today are in the minority and must deny cloture but the constitutional leverage is equivalent and the outcome is identical. No confirmation without Democratic cooperation. The real obstacle is not parliamentary. It is political. Democrats have a long and costly institutional history of treating procedural restraint as a virtue even when their opponents have long since abandoned the same courtesy, and of discovering, too late, that the other side was keeping score.

Republicans offered the definitive tutorial in this kind of institutional resolve in 2016, when the Senate majority, led by Mitch McConnell, refused to consider President Obama’s nomination of Merrick Garland to the Supreme Court for nearly a year, on the stated grounds that a new president should make the selection. The stated grounds were pretextual. The real grounds were power. The manoeuvre was widely criticised as a breach of constitutional norms. It was also completely effective. The Supreme Court was reshaped for a generation. The lesson drawn by McConnell’s critics that norms of procedural deference were worth preserving regardless of how the other side behaved has not aged especially well. The lesson drawn by McConnell himself, that institutional power belongs to those willing to use it without apology, has proved considerably more durable. Democrats are not in the majority. They do not need to be. They need only hold together, deny cloture, and decline to confirm a nominee who has already failed the most basic test of the job. If Merrick Garland could be refused a hearing on thinner grounds, Kevin Warsh can be refused a confirmation vote on these.

Democrats who delay Warsh’s confirmation need not invent a pretext. The grounds are substantive and readily defensible. The nominee’s financial disclosures are among the most complex ever submitted for this position, listing roughly 1,800 individual assets, many classified under confidentiality agreements that prevent him from identifying the underlying holdings. He has pledged to divest within 90 days of confirmation, but the Senate is not obligated to extend that trust in advance. His confirmation hearing raised, rather than resolved, questions about his independence from the executive branch. A thorough vetting is not obstruction. It is the job.

The midterm elections in November 2026 add a further dimension that Democrats would be foolish to ignore. Monetary policy works with a lag. Rate decisions made in the spring are felt by households in the autumn. A newly confirmed Fed chair eager to demonstrate usefulness to the administration that appointed him would have both the motive and the means to generate a short-term economic improvement—lower mortgage rates, looser credit, a consumer spending bounce—timed to arrive just as voters are making up their minds about which party to support. That Democrats would have facilitated this outcome through premature confirmation is not an argument they would enjoy making to their constituents.

A sustained blockade, by contrast, forces a public conversation about what kind of institution the Federal Reserve should be. It creates an opportunity to put into the congressional record testimony from economists who study monetary policy’s distributional effects, from community bankers who work in markets the Federal Reserve’s balance sheet decisions directly affect, and from HBCU administrators who can explain, in terms that general audiences can understand, how interest rate policy shapes the financial landscape of institutions that serve some of the most economically vulnerable students in American higher education. The Fed’s decisions are made in public. Their consequences for working Americans—and especially for African American communities—are rarely discussed in the rooms where those decisions get made. A confirmation blockade is that conversation, conducted at a volume that cannot be ignored.

The Federal Reserve’s independence is not a natural condition. It is a political achievement, and like all political achievements, it requires active defence from those with the means to provide it. A nominee who cannot bring himself to say who won a presidential election—a question whose answer is written in congressional certification and judicial record—has already told the market, and the public, something important about how he understands that independence. The Senate does not have to accept that answer. Democrats have the votes to reject it. The question is whether they have the will to use them without flinching, without offering off-ramps to colleagues tempted by the false comfort of bipartisan procedural cooperation, and without eventually concluding that confirmation on unfavourable terms is preferable to the discomfort of sustained opposition. It is not. Warsh should not be confirmed. He should be blocked. The precedent for doing so was set by the people now asking Democrats to stand down.

For African American institutions, and for the HBCUs that represent their most durable infrastructure, the lesson is one they have had occasion to learn repeatedly: the rules of the game are made by those who show up and insist on making them. Monetary policy is not race-neutral, however much it presents itself as such. The cost of credit, the availability of capital, the conditions under which wealth can be built and transmitted across generations—these are not technical abstractions. They are the material of institutional survival. The question of who chairs the Federal Reserve is, among other things, a question about whose survival the institution is organised to protect. That question deserves a full and unhurried answer.

Disclaimer: This article was assisted by ClaudeAI.

The Confederacy of Capital: The Texas Stock Exchange and the Risk of Southern Financial Hegemony

The South never stopped fighting the Civil War. It was the Cold War before the Cold War with USSR and it has been the Cold War after the USSR collapsed. America’s greatest war has always been within. The North, then and for too long thereafter thought it could give an inch and welcome its southern brethren back, but a mile and then some were taken. At this moment, all that remains for the South to conquer is the taking of the North’s financial capital from New York and it will have – checkmate. The South has risen and won. – William A. Foster, IV

The United States has never had a single center of financial power, but it has never had one this far south either. The Texas Stock Exchange — TXSE — formally launching in 2025, is not a regional curiosity. It is the institutional centerpiece of a coordinated effort to reshape who controls the rules of American capital markets, and the African American institutional ecosystem has not yet reckoned with what that means for its long-term economic position.

Founded in 2023 and capitalized with $120 million in initial funding from investors including BlackRock, Citadel Securities, Charles Schwab, and Virtu Financial, TXSE is aiming directly at the New York Stock Exchange and Nasdaq. Its headquarters are in Dallas. Its leadership includes former Texas Governor Rick Perry and former Dallas Federal Reserve President Richard Fisher. Its pitch to potential issuers is a governance environment that its founders describe as more CEO-friendly: reduced compliance requirements, streamlined listing rules, and a posture explicitly hostile to the accountability frameworks that have, however imperfectly, created some structural space for African American institutional participation in mainstream capital markets. For the African American institutional ecosystem — HBCUs, Black-owned banks and credit unions, Black-owned companies, professional associations, and the community development financial institutions that serve communities mainstream finance has historically ignored — this is not a distant policy question. It is a direct threat to the ownership architecture that the community is still trying to build.

To understand TXSE requires understanding the political economy of the modern South, and that requires a historical anchor. During Reconstruction, African Americans built consequential institutional infrastructure against enormous opposition: Black-owned banks, insurance companies, newspapers, and colleges that competed credibly in American economic and civic life. That infrastructure was not dismantled by market forces. It was dismantled by the same mechanism that has constrained African American institutional ownership in every era — control the rules of the game, and you control who benefits from playing it. The Freedman’s Savings Bank collapsed after federal mismanagement stripped depositors of $3 million in assets. The Greenwood District of Tulsa, the most concentrated expression of African American commercial ownership in the country’s history, was burned in 1921 with official sanction. Across the South and beyond, Black-owned enterprises were regulated out of existence, denied credit access, or destroyed. The consistent instrument was institutional architecture — the deliberate construction of financial rules that embedded the interests of one group at the expense of another. The Texas Stock Exchange is that instrument, updated for the twenty-first century.

Texas has rapidly positioned itself as the national headquarters of the movement to strip social and governance accountability from investment and corporate decision-making. In 2023, Governor Greg Abbott signed legislation banning state contracts with any firm that considers environmental, social, or governance factors in its investment decisions. The state legislature has moved to constrain public pension fund managers from incorporating anything beyond narrow financial return metrics, explicitly prohibiting the mission-aligned investing frameworks that community development financial institutions and HBCU-linked endowment vehicles depend on to justify participation in community-anchored development projects. Florida has enacted parallel restrictions. Oklahoma’s state treasurer blacklisted more than a dozen financial institutions for their stated climate commitments. Tennessee, Georgia, and a growing list of other states are constructing the same legal and financial infrastructure, all oriented toward the same goal: a parallel financial order governed by Southern political priorities, insulated from federal regulatory oversight and from the investment norms of the institutions that have grudgingly made room for African American institutional participation. What HBCU Money has documented over years of covering African American institutional finance by highlighting the slow erosion of Black-owned banks, the chronic undercapitalization of HBCU endowments, the failure of institutional capital to circulate within the African American ecosystem is now confronting a coordinated counterforce operating with the full backing of state governments, sovereign-scale endowments, and the largest names in global finance.

TXSE’s proposed listing standards deserve careful scrutiny because their effect on African American institutional economic participation is structural, not incidental. The exchange plans to impose earnings tests and revenue thresholds that would disqualify an estimated thirty percent or more of companies currently listed on Nasdaq, a category that includes a disproportionate share of minority-led, cooperatively structured, mission-driven, and early-stage enterprises. The cooperative structures, community development financial institutions, and early-stage technology firms that represent the growth edge of African American institutional economic activity are precisely the kinds of entities these standards are calibrated to exclude. Simultaneously, Texas has enacted legislation limiting shareholder lawsuits unless investors own at least three percent of a company’s shares. That threshold effectively neutralizes most activist shareholders, including African American pension funds, HBCU endowment investment vehicles, and minority-focused fund managers that rarely accumulate the concentrated positions necessary to meet that bar. The combination is a governance architecture designed to concentrate power among already-powerful institutional insiders and to diminish the accountability levers that African American institutional investors have worked to develop. This is not an accident of design. It is the design.

The University of Texas Investment Management Company — UTIMCO — manages the combined endowments of both the University of Texas System and the Texas A&M System. Together, these pools constitute one of the largest publicly managed academic endowment complexes in the United States, surpassing Harvard in combined assets under management. UTIMCO has, under sustained pressure from the Texas conservative political establishment, moved aggressively to align its investment posture with the ideological priorities of state leadership. It has reduced exposure to investment vehicles that incorporate social or governance accountability factors and directed assets toward domestic energy production, real estate, and financial instruments consistent with what its political overseers consider appropriate. UTIMCO’s scale gives it significant market-moving influence. Its alignment whether formal or informal with the TXSE project represents a formidable concentration of institutionally managed capital operating explicitly outside the accountability frameworks that African American institutional investors have built their participation strategies around. HBCU endowments hold a combined base that, while growing, remains dwarfed by what UTIMCO alone commands. The strategic implication is direct: when the largest endowment systems in the South are operating with an investment philosophy that excludes the governance accountability frameworks African American institutions depend on, the negotiating position of those institutions in the broader capital market is weakened.

The direct risks to African American institutional ownership are compounding across three distinct dimensions. The first concerns the exclusion of Black-led enterprises from the visibility, liquidity, and valuation premiums that accompany public market access. HBCU Money has documented that African American-owned employer businesses generated $212 billion in combined revenue in 2022 — a figure that, while representing meaningful growth, amounts to 0.43 percent of total U.S. business revenue for a community that constitutes over fourteen percent of the population. The exchange listing premium with the ability to attract institutional capital, establish a public valuation, and access the equity markets for growth financing has historically been one of the structural mechanisms that translates enterprise scale into compounding institutional wealth. TXSE’s listing standards are calibrated against the cooperative enterprises, CDFIs, and early-stage technology firms at the growth edge of African American institutional economic activity. Without access to a major exchange platform, these firms face persistent disadvantages in attracting the institutional capital that would allow them to scale. Over time, this structural exclusion deepens the ownership gap not through any single discriminatory act, but through the cumulative operation of market design.

The second dimension of risk concerns HBCU endowments and the broader African American institutional investment ecosystem. As HBCU Money has reported, African American-owned banks currently hold approximately $6.4 billion in combined assets — down from forty-eight institutions in 2001 to just seventeen today, and down from a peak share of 0.2 percent of total U.S. banking assets in 1926 to 0.027 percent today. HBCU endowments are managed, in most cases, through large fund managers some of whom are direct investors in the TXSE. As the exchange scales and as its listed companies grow in market capitalization, passive investment vehicles and actively managed funds will increasingly hold TXSE-listed assets as a matter of index composition and portfolio construction. HBCU endowment pools, pension funds serving African American public employees, and investment vehicles managed on behalf of Black institutional clients could find themselves indirectly capitalizing an exchange whose structural design, governance philosophy, and political alignment work against African American institutional interests. Annual interest payments transferred from Black households to non-Black financial institutions are estimated at approximately $120 billion — more than half of what all Black-owned businesses generate in revenue in an entire year. TXSE’s governance model is structured to compound that dynamic, not to reverse it.

The third and most consequential dimension concerns the governance architecture within which African American institutional ownership operates in publicly listed companies more broadly. The decades-long effort to increase African American representation in corporate governance, to build institutional investor coalitions capable of pressing for equitable accountability, and to develop shareholder advocacy tools that translate institutional capital into institutional voice has depended on an exchange and regulatory environment that, however reluctantly, created minimum conditions for accountability. TXSE’s governance philosophy centered on limiting shareholder litigation, reducing disclosure requirements, and eliminating the governance frameworks that allowed accountability advocacy to function would, if it achieves the national scale it is pursuing, erode the leverage that African American institutional investors have slowly accumulated. This is not a threat to abstract norms. It is a threat to the concrete mechanisms through which African American institutional capital translates into institutional power.

There is a cultural branding dimension to TXSE that should not be dismissed as mere marketing, because culture and capital are not separate categories they are the same category expressed differently. TXSE supporters have embraced the ‘Y’all Street’ branding, positioning Dallas as the spiritual and institutional opposite of what they call ‘woke capital.’ The slogans — ‘Texas roots. Global reach,’ ‘Built for CEOs, not bureaucrats’ — are explicit declarations of institutional identity. They communicate to potential issuers what governance norms the exchange will enforce, and they communicate to African American institutional stakeholders what norms will be conspicuously absent. An exchange that markets itself as the home of American finance divorced from social accountability is not making a neutral statement about regulatory philosophy. It is announcing its constituency. For the African American institutional ecosystem, that announcement should carry the same interpretive weight as any other structural signal about where capital will and will not flow.

The strategic response available to African American institutions is not the construction of a competing exchange. That framing misreads both the competitive dynamics of exchange infrastructure and the actual leverage points available. Exchanges are winner-take-most infrastructure. TXSE enters the market with $120 million in capitalization, the institutional backing of the largest names in global finance, and the network effects of a state government willing to direct sovereign-scale endowment capital in its direction. A Black-led exchange starting from zero cannot compete with that on equivalent terms in the near term, and proposing otherwise is not strategy — it is aspiration dressed as a plan. The more consequential response is coordinated institutional non-participation: the deliberate, organized withdrawal of African American institutional capital from TXSE’s orbit, combined with the systematic redirection of that capital toward institutions and instruments that serve African American ownership interests. This is not the high road. It is the only road with actual traction.

Executing that response, however, requires an honest accounting of which African American institutions are actually free to act and that accounting begins with the distinction between public and private HBCUs. The majority of HBCUs are public institutions, and the majority of public HBCUs are located in precisely the Southern states that are constructing the Southern Capital Doctrine. Southern University operates under the authority of the Louisiana Board of Regents. Florida A&M is a Florida state institution. North Carolina A&T, Prairie View A&M, Alabama State, Jackson State each operates within a state governance structure that gives hostile state legislatures direct leverage over budget, investment policy, and institutional positioning. These institutions cannot unilaterally reallocate endowment assets, cannot take public institutional positions against the financial policies of their host states, and in many cases cannot even direct their banking relationships without navigating state procurement rules that route dollars away from Black-owned institutions. Asking public HBCUs to lead the charge against TXSE is asking institutions to act against the direct interests of the governments that control their operating budgets. That is not a realistic foundation for strategy.

The private HBCUs occupy a structurally different position. Howard, Morehouse, Spelman, Hampton, Tuskegee, Xavier, Dillard, and their peer institutions have independent governance, control their own endowment investment decisions, and face no state legislative veto over their financial positioning. They are the tier of the HBCU ecosystem with the freedom to act directly to reallocate endowment capital away from fund managers backing TXSE, to direct institutional deposits toward Black-owned banks, to take explicit public positions on exchange governance policy, and to convene the broader institutional conversation that a coordinated response requires. The scale of their endowments, while modest relative to their peer institutions in the broader higher education landscape, is sufficient to establish meaningful momentum if directed in concert. Howard University’s endowment alone, if managed with the strategic intentionality that this moment demands, could anchor a coalition capable of making market-visible moves. Private HBCUs have the freedom that public HBCUs do not. The question is whether they will exercise it.

But the public HBCU ecosystem is not, for this reason, strategically irrelevant. It simply operates through a different institutional layer one that is frequently overlooked precisely because it does not appear on the official organizational chart. Every public HBCU has an alumni association that is legally and operationally independent of the institution itself. Every public HBCU has a foundation, a separately incorporated philanthropic entity with its own board, its own investment decisions, and its own capacity to act without state legislative approval. The Prairie View A&M National Alumni Association is not a Texas state agency. The Southern University Foundation is not subject to the Louisiana Board of Regents. The alumni associations and foundations of public HBCUs can bank with Black-owned financial institutions, direct philanthropic capital toward CDFIs, take public positions on financial policy questions, and coordinate with private HBCUs in ways that the institutions themselves cannot. If that coordination is sufficiently explicit and sustained, the functional effect is equivalent to the institution acting even though technically it is not. This is not a workaround. It is how every other community with sophisticated institutional strategy operates. The university cannot endorse a candidate. The alumni PAC can. The university cannot divest from a financial institution. The foundation can choose where to bank. The structure already exists. It simply has not been deployed with this level of strategic intention.

This layered architecture suggests a three-tier framework for the African American institutional response to TXSE. The first tier consists of private HBCUs acting as direct institutional agents reallocating endowment capital, directing deposits, and convening the policy conversation. The second tier consists of public HBCU alumni associations and foundations acting as coordinated proxy agents making the investment and banking decisions the institutions themselves cannot make, in deliberate alignment with the strategic direction being set by private HBCUs in the first tier. The third tier consists of the broader African American institutional network — Black-owned banks and credit unions, Black-owned firms, the Thurgood Marshall Fund and UNCF, the HBCU Faculty Development Network, African American professional associations, and African American-controlled pension and foundation assets — functioning as the connective tissue that allows the first two tiers to operate in concert without requiring any single institution to take a politically exposed position alone. Jewish American institutional strategy has operated through exactly this kind of layered coordination for generations. Korean rotating credit associations, Indian American technology sector networks, and Irish American political machines have each built equivalent structures calibrated to their specific institutional contexts. The African American community has all of the institutional components. It has not yet assembled them into a coordinated response mechanism.

On the question of regulatory engagement, intellectual honesty requires acknowledging the political environment directly. Petitioning the current Securities and Exchange Commission for intervention in TXSE’s governance standards is not a realistic near-term lever. The present administration’s posture toward exchange regulation, and toward the financial accountability frameworks that any such petition would invoke, makes meaningful regulatory relief under current leadership implausible. The more strategically sound approach is to build the legal and analytical record now to commission the research, document the structural exclusions, develop the regulatory theory, and position African American institutional stakeholders to arrive at a future administration’s SEC with a fully developed dossier rather than a reactive complaint. This is not passivity. It is the institutional discipline of building for the long game. Every dollar spent on legal analysis and regulatory documentation today is leverage that compounds when the political environment changes. TXSE is not going away. Its governance standards will be litigated and legislated over decades, not months. The community that has done the analytical work in advance will have the most influence over how that process resolves.

The parallel long-term aspiration deserves to be named more precisely than a vague commitment to Black-led exchange infrastructure and the most strategically coherent version of that aspiration points not inward but outward, across the Atlantic. The American Depository Receipt, the financial instrument that allowed foreign companies to list on U.S. exchanges without a full domestic registration, was built on a single insight: capital markets are not inherently bounded by national borders, and the right legal architecture can bridge them. That insight has historically flowed in one direction toward the United States, which offered the world’s deepest and most liquid capital markets, and therefore attracted the world’s enterprises seeking valuation and investor access. The generational goal for African American institutional finance is to reverse that directionality. Not to build a competing domestic exchange that fights TXSE on its home turf, under SEC jurisdiction, subject to the same regulatory environment TXSE is actively reshaping in its favor but to develop what might be called African Depository Receipts: a parallel instrument that would allow African American enterprises to list on African exchanges, access African institutional capital, and build the financial architecture of a genuinely transnational diaspora economy.

The mechanics of this idea deserve serious analysis rather than dismissal. The Ghana Stock Exchange, the Johannesburg Stock Exchange, the Nigerian Exchange Group, and the Rwanda Stock Exchange each represent meaningfully different regulatory environments, liquidity profiles, and investor bases and none of them, individually, yet offers the depth of the U.S. exchanges. These are not trivial complications. Currency risk, repatriation structures, cross-border regulatory compliance, and the still-developing institutional investor base on the continent are real structural challenges that any African Depository Receipt framework would need to address directly. But the original American Depository Receipt confronted equivalent complications when it was developed in 1927 to allow British investors to hold shares in American companies without navigating U.S. custodial arrangements directly. The instrument was built to solve exactly the kind of cross-border structural problem that an African Depository Receipt would need to solve today. The complications are engineering problems, not fundamental objections.

What makes this more than a financial instrument is the diaspora dimension that no domestic exchange alternative can replicate. African American businesses listing on African exchanges are not merely accessing a different pool of capital they are creating the institutional infrastructure for transnational capital flows that currently have no formal mechanism. They are building the financial architecture of the relationship between the African continent and its diaspora that has been gestured at politically and culturally for generations but never operationalized at the level of institutional ownership and capital markets. An African American technology firm listed on the Ghana Stock Exchange is not making a symbolic statement about Pan-African solidarity. It is creating a vehicle through which Ghanaian pension funds, South African institutional investors, and Nigerian family offices can hold ownership stakes in African American enterprises and through which African American institutional capital can flow toward African markets with the legal infrastructure, fiduciary accountability, and liquidity mechanisms that serious institutional investment requires. This is the financial architecture of diaspora strategy. It is what other transnational communities have built, in their own ways, over generations. The Irish American political machine was not just about elections it was about building the institutional relationships that made capital flow between Ireland and its diaspora. The Indian American technology network is not just about talent it is about the ownership and capital relationships that connect Silicon Valley to Bangalore. African American institutional finance has the community, the capital base, and increasingly the institutional sophistication to build an equivalent structure. The African Depository Receipt is the mechanism through which that structure becomes real.

This is honestly a twenty-year project. It requires the diplomatic groundwork of building formal relationships between African American institutional stakeholders and African exchange regulators and finance ministries. It requires the legal architecture of cross-border custodial arrangements, currency hedging instruments, and repatriation structures that protect both issuers and investors. It requires the development of African institutional investor capacity — African pension funds, sovereign wealth funds, and family offices — to the point where they can absorb meaningful African Depository Receipt issuance. And it requires the cultivation of African American enterprises of sufficient scale and governance maturity to make credible exchange listings. None of that is impossible. All of it takes time. The community should be building toward it now through the HBCU international programs and African studies centers that can develop the human capital, through the Black-owned financial institutions that can begin building the correspondent banking relationships, and through the private HBCU leadership that can convene the cross-institutional conversations this kind of generational commitment requires while executing the near-term response to TXSE through the levers it actually controls today: institutional non-participation in TXSE’s capital orbit, coordinated redirection of African American institutional deposits and endowment capital, and proxy action through alumni associations and foundations.

The Texas Stock Exchange is the latest iteration of a pattern that has defined African American economic history: rules written by others, in institutions controlled by others, to serve interests that have never included African American institutional ownership as a priority. The community’s $7.1 trillion in household assets, its $1.3 trillion in annual consumer spending, its $212 billion in employer-business revenue — none of that capital produces compounding institutional power without the ownership infrastructure to retain and redeploy it. African American-owned banks hold 0.027 percent of total U.S. banking assets. African American businesses generate 0.43 percent of total U.S. business revenue. HBCU endowments represent a fraction of what peer institutions hold. These are not cultural facts. They are ownership facts. And an exchange designed to deepen the concentration of institutional ownership among those who already hold it is not neutral infrastructure. It is a structural threat that demands a structural response not an aspirational one, but a concrete, coordinated, institutionally grounded one, built from the realistic assessment of which institutions are free to act, through which channels, and toward which ends.

The Confederacy never formally dissolved its ambitions. It adapted its instruments. Where it once used literacy tests to suppress political participation, it now uses listing standards and shareholder litigation thresholds to suppress institutional financial participation. Where it once burned Greenwood, it now writes exchange governance rules that make the next Greenwood structurally impossible to capitalize. African American institutions that understand this history have both the analytical framework and the institutional capacity to respond. The only remaining question is whether the community’s institutional leadership will treat the emergence of the Texas Stock Exchange with the strategic seriousness (threat) it deserves and whether it will organize that response through the institutions that are actually free to act, rather than waiting for the ones that are not.

Sidebar: A Three-Tier Response Framework for African American Institutions

TierInstitutionsAvailable Actions
Tier 1: Direct ActorsPrivate HBCUs — Howard, Morehouse, Spelman, Hampton, Tuskegee, Xavier, DillardReallocate endowment capital away from fund managers backing TXSE; direct deposits to Black-owned banks; take public positions on exchange governance; convene cross-institutional strategy
Tier 2: Coordinated Proxy ActorsPublic HBCU alumni associations and foundations (independent of state governance)Bank with Black-owned financial institutions; direct philanthropic capital toward CDFIs; coordinate investment decisions in alignment with Tier 1 strategy; build public record on regulatory exclusions
Tier 3: Connective TissueBlack-owned banks and credit unions; fraternities and sororities; NAACP; Urban League; African American professional associations; African American-controlled pension and foundation assetsAggregate capital flows away from TXSE ecosystem; build and fund legal/analytical dossier for future regulatory engagement; sustain coordinated non-participation pressure across the institutional network

Note on regulatory strategy:

SEC engagement under the current administration is not a realistic near-term lever. The priority now is building the legal record, regulatory theory, and analytical documentation needed to engage a future administration’s SEC with a fully developed dossier. The generational goal is the development of African Depository Receipts — instruments allowing African American enterprises to list on African exchanges including the Ghana Stock Exchange, Johannesburg Stock Exchange, Nigerian Exchange Group, and others — creating the financial architecture of a transnational diaspora economy. This is a twenty-year project requiring diplomatic groundwork, cross-border legal architecture, and African institutional investor development. HBCU international programs, Black-owned correspondent banking relationships, and private HBCU leadership convening are the near-term building blocks.

Disclaimer: This article was assisted by ClaudeAI.

The Counter-Curriculum: How HBCUs Must Respond to a Global Infrastructure of Violence Against (Black) Women

The most disrespected person in America is the Black woman. The most unprotected person in America is the Black woman. The most neglected person in America is the Black woman. — Malcolm X, 1962

Malcolm X’s oft-quoted declaration that the Black woman is “the most disrespected, unprotected, and neglected person in America” was delivered in 1962. More than six decades later, the data have not refuted him. A CNN investigation published in late March 2026 has exposed something that demands a serious, institutional response from every sector of Black America, including and especially its colleges and universities. A months-long investigation uncovered a hidden, online world where the commodification and amplification of sexual violence against women is flourishing, a network of men sharing techniques for drugging their partners, filming the assaults, trading the videos, and livestreaming them to paying audiences. The site at the center of the investigation, Motherless.com, had 62 million visits in February 2026 alone, with its core audience based in the United States, and hosts more than 20,000 videos of so-called “sleep” content footage of women filmed without their knowledge while unconscious. To place that figure in context: 62 million people would constitute the 25th largest country in the world — larger than South Korea, Algeria, and Canada. That is the monthly audience for a single platform built around the sexual violation of unconscious women. It is not a subculture. It is a global institution of predation, and it is operating primarily out of the United States.

Gender violence is not a single act. It is a spectrum of harm rooted in the unequal distribution of power between men and women that manifests across every stage of life and every social environment. It includes rape and sexual assault, intimate partner violence, domestic abuse, and femicide. It includes sexual harassment in workplaces, schools, and public spaces. It includes child sexual abuse, the grooming of minors, and child marriage — the practice of forcing girls into unions before they are legally or developmentally capable of consent, which remains prevalent across parts of Africa, the Caribbean, and South Asia, and which is not absent from communities within the United States. It includes stalking, coercive control, and psychological abuse that leaves no visible wound but dismantles a person’s autonomy over time. It includes digital abuse — the non-consensual sharing of intimate images, online harassment campaigns, and, as the CNN investigation has now documented in clinical detail, the organized online distribution of assault footage as a commodity. Gender violence is, in the fullest sense, a system: one that is reproduced through culture, enabled by institutions that fail to act, and sustained by the silence of those who witness it and say nothing. Understanding it as a system, rather than as a series of isolated incidents perpetrated by exceptional individuals, is the prerequisite for any institutional response that will actually reduce it.

This is not a peripheral issue. It is not a culture war distraction. It is a public health emergency and a civilizational challenge, and the African American institutional ecosystem, which has historically risen to meet civilizational challenges, cannot treat it as someone else’s problem.It is a problem acutely within our community as well.

The scale of what CNN uncovered speaks to a level of organized predation that defies casual dismissal. Inside the Telegram group documented by CNN, men from Poland, West Africa, Spain, and across the world shared specific drugs and doses for sedating their partners, traded assault videos for feedback, and livestreamed the abuse of unconscious women in real time for $20 a viewer, with cryptocurrency as the preferred payment method. A French lawmaker who was herself drugged by a former senator described these groups as “an online rape academy, where every subject is taught.” Perpetrators are also systematically engineering their conduct around evidentiary challenges shifting toward zolpidem, or Ambien, specifically because it exits the body in seven to eight hours, meaning that by the time a survivor wakes up, registers that something may have happened, and reaches a hospital, the toxicological window may already have closed.

The forensic sophistication of this network, the deliberate drug selection, the cryptocurrency payments, the global coordination points to something beyond impulsive misconduct. It reflects a learned culture of predation, one that is being transmitted across generations of men through digital infrastructure. That transmission infrastructure is now operating at scale, and it is finding ready audiences in the United States.

For Black America, the alarm must ring louder still, because the baseline conditions that produce vulnerability to gender violence are already catastrophically elevated within the community.

The statistics are not ambiguous. More than four in ten Black women experience physical violence from an intimate partner during their lifetimes — a rate higher than white women, Latinas, and Asian and Pacific Islander women. More than 20 percent of Black women are raped during their lifetimes, a higher share than among women overall. Black women face a particularly high risk of being killed at the hands of a man, and one study found they were two and a half times more likely to be murdered by men than their white counterparts, with more than nine in ten Black female victims knowing their killers. More recent data sharpens the picture further: Black adult women are six times more likely to be killed than white women, and an estimated 51 percent of Black female adult homicides are related to intimate partner violence.

The problem is not confined to adulthood. One in four Black girls will be sexually abused before the age of 18, and 40 to 60 percent of Black women report being subjected to coercive sexual contact by age 18. For every Black woman who reports rape, at least 15 do not. Nearly 92 percent of Black women homicide victims knew their killers, and 56 percent of those killings were committed by a current or former intimate partner with 92 percent of those cases being intraracial.

What Black America is experiencing is not an anomaly. It is the domestic expression of a global pattern that follows Black and African-descended women across every geography in which they live. In the Caribbean, recent studies conducted in Grenada, Guyana, Jamaica, Suriname, and Trinidad and Tobago indicate that 27 to 40 percent of women have experienced violence at the hands of their partners. Jamaica holds the second-highest rate of femicide in the world, and in Guyana, 55 percent of women reported having experienced at least one form of violence, including intimate partner violence and non-partner sexual abuse. In the United Kingdom, Black and Black British women experience gender-based violence including domestic violence at higher rates than other minority ethnic groups. On the African continent, South Africa’s Human Sciences Research Council found higher victimization rates specifically among Black African women, and in a single quarter of 2024 alone, 957 women were murdered, with more than 10,000 rapes reported. In direct response to this continental emergency, the African Union adopted its first dedicated legal instrument aimed at ending all forms of violence against women and girls in February 2025, a convention that specifically promotes positive masculinity and greater accountability as a unique feature of its framework.

The global dimension is not incidental to the American story. It is the same story told across different jurisdictions. The same cultural scripts that normalize male dominance and erode accountability for violence against women operate in Kingston and Cape Town and London and Detroit. The same digital networks that the CNN investigation exposed are recruiting perpetrators from West Africa, Europe, and the United States simultaneously. This is a Diaspora crisis, and it demands a Diaspora response. HBCUs, which have increasingly built academic and institutional relationships with African and Caribbean universities, are positioned to connect these dots to situate the American crisis within its global context, to learn from interventions that are working elsewhere, and to contribute research and programming models to a broader African diaspora conversation about the protection of Black women. The African Union’s masculinity framework, the Caribbean’s regional data infrastructure, and the HBCU ecosystem’s cultural reach into Black American communities are assets that, taken together, could form the foundation of a genuinely transnational response. That potential will remain unrealized as long as American Black institutions treat gender violence as a domestic social services problem rather than what it actually is: a global threat to Black women that requires the same level of coordinated diaspora strategy that these institutions bring to economic development and political advocacy.

These numbers do not describe a community that is adequately protecting its women. They describe a structural failure that has accumulated over generations, one that requires structural remedies not simply moral condemnation, and not simply resources directed at survivors after the fact. The problem must be addressed at the point of formation: in boys, in young men, in the cultural scripts that normalize domination and erode accountability.

This is where HBCUs and the broader African American institutional ecosystem must act with far greater seriousness and coordination than they have to date.

The HBCU sector occupies a unique position in this conversation. These institutions enroll a substantial share of Black college students, graduate a disproportionate share of Black professionals, and carry a legacy of moral leadership during periods of civilizational crisis. They are also, frankly, not immune from the problem. Gender violence and retaliation are common in higher education, and Black campuses are not insulated from this reality. Students at HBCUs confront gender injustices that particularly affect the lives of women and gender nonconforming persons, and HBCUs, by primarily centering institutional focus on the enrollment challenges of Black men, can inadvertently support a belief that Black women and LGBTQIA+ students face fewer obstacles, an assumption that does not survive contact with the data.

There is existing infrastructure to build on. Research has examined culturally specific domestic violence prevention programs for HBCU campuses, finding that cultural barriers and preconceived stigmas reduce the effectiveness of standard prevention programs meaning that interventions designed for predominantly white institutions cannot simply be transplanted into HBCU contexts. In 2024, the Department of Justice’s Office on Violence Against Women awarded 19 grants totaling $9.48 million through a special initiative supporting HBCUs, Hispanic-Serving Institutions, and Tribal Colleges and Universities to strengthen campus responses to domestic violence, dating violence, sexual assault, and stalking. These grants represent a foundation. They do not represent a comprehensive response and they should not be the primary funding mechanism. The private sector has both the resources and the standing to act with far greater scale and far less bureaucratic latency than federal grant cycles allow. One hundred African American millionaires committing $500,000 per campus over two years would deliver $500,000 in dedicated programming support to every HBCU, a total investment of $50 million that would instantly dwarf existing federal allocations, establish donor-driven accountability structures, and signal to the entire sector that this is a philanthropic priority, not merely a compliance obligation. That capital commitment is not aspirational arithmetic. It is a straightforward mobilization of the wealth that already exists within the African American professional and entrepreneurial class, directed toward an institutional crisis that wealth alone cannot solve but that no institutional solution can be built without.

What is needed is something more ambitious in scope and more durable in design. The CNN investigation is a data point about what is already circulating through digital culture, the attitudes, the techniques, the normalization of violation, before young men arrive on any campus. The university is downstream of the problem, and while campus programming is necessary, it is insufficient on its own. The pipeline of harm begins in early childhood, and the intervention architecture must match. This requires HBCUs and their affiliated institutional ecosystems to coordinate across three tiers.

The first is early childhood and K-12 engagement. Organizations like 100 Black Men of America, which operates mentorship programs in cities across the country and works directly with boys from middle school age through young adulthood, are positioned to embed gender respect curricula into the environments where boys develop their foundational understanding of power and relationship. This is not sensitivity training; it is character formation infrastructure. The organization’s existing mentorship architecture structured, sustained, male-to-male, and explicitly oriented toward community development is precisely the vehicle through which collective accountability norms can be transmitted before boys reach campus. Urban League affiliates and Jack and Jill of America, which maintains strong networks among Black middle-class families with children, offer complementary reach into different socioeconomic strata. None of this formation work operates in a vacuum, however. It must be reinforced by sustained, visible messaging through the media infrastructure that Black families actually consume. Black-owned media outlets (television networks, radio stations, digital platforms, and podcasts with significant Black audiences) carry an institutional responsibility to make gender violence a recurring subject of public discourse rather than an episodic response to national headlines. PSA campaigns developed in partnership with HBCU communications and media programs, featuring Black men speaking directly and without deflection about the protection of Black women and girls, would represent a meaningful use of that infrastructure. The message cannot come only from institutions; it must circulate through culture, and Black-owned media is the vehicle for that circulation.

The second tier is the HBCU campus itself, which must move beyond compliance frameworks toward genuine culture change. Research has found that many Black males use toxic masculinity as a crutch to conceal insecurity and hardship, and that Black men with higher levels of anxiety and aggressive confrontational styles are more likely to endorse intimate partner violence beliefs while Black men who identify more with collectivist values are less likely to do so. This finding has direct programmatic implications: interventions that strengthen identification with community, mutual obligation, and the protection of the group are more effective than those that approach the problem primarily through legal deterrence or shame. HBCUs should develop standing male accountability cohorts not one-time training sessions, but sustained, semester-long formations that engage students in the intellectual, historical, and practical dimensions of gender justice within Black institutional life. Faculty development is equally critical and equally neglected. The HBCU Faculty Development Network, a national organization that supports effective teaching and professional growth across HBCUs and minority-serving institutions, represents a ready infrastructure through which gender violence prevention training can be integrated into faculty and administrator development at scale. Professors, academic advisors, and student affairs staff are among the earliest points of contact when students in crisis reach out or when warning signs emerge; they require preparation that goes well beyond Title IX compliance checklists, and the Faculty Development Network has the convening capacity to deliver it. The campus is also a high-density media environment with captive audiences at predictable moments, and HBCU athletic events represent one of the most underutilized platforms in Black institutional life for norm-setting messaging. HBCU football and basketball games draw tens of thousands of attendees (students, alumni, families, and community members) and are increasingly broadcast to national audiences. PSA spots aired during these events, developed with the same production seriousness as any institutional branding campaign and featuring Black men calling other Black men to explicit accountability, would reach a cross-generational audience in a context that carries genuine cultural weight. Homecoming weekends alone represent a communication opportunity that no digital campaign can replicate. The question is whether HBCU athletic conferences and their media partners treat this as part of their institutional mandate or continue to leave halftime to entertainment alone.

The third tier is the broader community ecosystem, and it requires more than exhortation directed at existing organizations. What is needed is a sector-wide initiative coordinated through the institutional bodies that actually govern HBCU life: the Thurgood Marshall College Fund and the United Negro College Fund, both of which maintain direct relationships with HBCU presidents and boards and have the organizational capacity to set sector-wide standards, attract expert partners, and hold institutions accountable for measurable outcomes. A gender violence prevention framework embedded in HBCU enrollment requirements, first-year experience programming, and faculty development designed in partnership with research institutions and evidence-based practitioners, and tracked longitudinally would represent a genuine structural intervention rather than a campus-by-campus patchwork of compliance exercises. The sector has coordinated on financial aid advocacy, accreditation defense, and federal funding campaigns. It must now coordinate on the protection of Black women and girls from a global infrastructure of organized sexual predation that is actively recruiting its next generation of perpetrators through the same devices sitting in every Black student’s pocket.

Cutting across all three tiers is a research and institutional development problem that has received far too little attention. Effective intervention requires data — longitudinal, culturally specific, and grounded in the actual dynamics of Black family and community life. That research capacity exists within the HBCU ecosystem and needs to be dramatically strengthened. Hampton University’s National Center for Black Family Life, which has operated for over four decades and produces an Annual Report on the State of Black Families, represents exactly the kind of HBCU-anchored research institution that should be at the center of this work. It is neither well-funded nor well-known relative to the scale of the problem it is positioned to address. Institutions like it; research centers embedded within HBCUs, oriented toward Black family formation and community health, capable of generating the culturally specific data that generic national surveys do not produce need philanthropic investment, federal research partnerships, and coordinated visibility across the HBCU sector. The absence of robust, HBCU-generated research on gender violence within Black communities is itself a strategic gap. It leaves the field to outside institutions whose framing does not always reflect Black community realities and whose findings do not reliably reach Black institutional decision-makers. Closing that gap is not an academic exercise; it is a precondition for evidence-based programming that actually works.

It is important to be precise about what this argument is and is not making. Groups dedicated to involving men in ending violence against women have operated for decades; organizations like Men Stopping Violence in Atlanta use an ecological, community-based accountability model that demonstrates the potential for disrupting traditions of abuse and dominance at individual, familial, local, national, and global levels. The model works. The evidence supports it. What has been missing is the willingness of Black institutional leadership to adopt it at scale, fund it sustainably, talk about it publicly, and hold themselves accountable for measurable outcomes. Black men at every level of institutional life, from university presidents to student leaders to media personalities with large audiences must be willing to discuss this problem actively and without the defensive hedging that has allowed it to fester. The “not all men” reflex is a cultural tax levied on Black women every time they attempt to raise the alarm. Black men who understand what is at stake for their community have both the standing and the obligation to retire it.

The CNN investigation does not represent an aberration. It represents the visible tip of a global infrastructure of learned predation that is operating through the same digital channels that Black boys and young men inhabit daily. The WHO has noted that reliable data on drug-facilitated sexual assault is scarce by design, because the crime is severely underreported — a product of the shame, guilt, perceived self-blame, and absence of memory that make these cases particularly hard for survivors to come forward on, compounded by inadequate law enforcement training and a prosecution record that gives survivors little reason to expect the process to go well. The underreporting problem is especially severe in Black communities, where historical distrust of law enforcement creates additional barriers to disclosure.

The Black woman, as Malcolm X observed, has carried more than her share in this country. She has built institutions, sustained families, anchored communities, and produced excellence under conditions of compound marginalization. The question before Black America’s institutional leadership (university presidents, national officers of civic and professional organizations, sorority leadership, professional association executives, Black media owners, and community development directors) is whether they will mobilize the full weight of that institutional infrastructure in her defense. Not as an act of charity, but as a strategic imperative: communities that do not protect their women do not survive as communities. They fracture, they hollow out, and they lose the institutional density on which collective advancement depends.

The online academy exposed by CNN is teaching a curriculum of violation to an audience that is, in substantial part, American and potentially present in every Black community in the country. The answer must be a counter-curriculum one built from early childhood through college, amplified through Black-owned media, announced at halftime on HBCU fields and courts, connected to diaspora partners from Accra to Kingston to London, and driven by Black men who are willing to say plainly that this is their problem to solve. HBCUs are not the only institution with a role to play. But they are among the most important, and the moment demands that they act accordingly.


Organizations Working to End Gender Violence: Where to Direct Your Support

The article you have just read describes a crisis. The following organizations are doing the institutional work of responding to it. Readers who wish to support this work financially or through advocacy are encouraged to consider each of these organizations based on geography, focus area, and mission alignment.

Ujima: The National Center on Violence Against Women in the Black Community — The only national resource center in the United States dedicated exclusively to addressing domestic violence, sexual assault, and community violence within the Black community. Ujima leads training, research, policy advocacy, and technical assistance with a focus on healing Black women and girls across the African diaspora. (ujimacommunity.org)

Black Women’s Blueprint — Founded in 2008 by Black women in Brooklyn, Black Women’s Blueprint is a transnational civil and human rights organization that centers the experiences of women of African descent in the fight against sexual violence, reproductive injustice, and racial inequality. The organization convened the first Black Women’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission on Sexual Violence in United States history and provides technical assistance to HBCU campuses on gender violence prevention. (blackwomensblueprint.org)

A Long Walk Home — Founded in 2003 by sisters Salamishah and Scheherazade Tillet, this Chicago-based national nonprofit uses art and activism to empower Black girls and young women to end gender-based violence. Its Girl/Friends Leadership Institute trains Black girls ages 12 to 17 as social justice leaders, and the organization was a lead organizer of the #MuteRKelly campaign. (alongwalkhome.org)

The Safe Sisters Circle — Founded in 2018 by attorney Alana C. Brown, this Black woman-founded and led Washington, D.C. nonprofit provides free, culturally specific legal representation, mental health support, and advocacy to Black women and girl survivors of domestic violence and sexual assault in the city’s most underserved communities. (safesisterscircle.org)

National Black Women’s Justice Institute (NBWJI) — Founded by Dr. Monique Couvson, NBWJI works at the intersection of gender violence, race, and the criminal justice system — specifically to reduce sexual assault and domestic violence in African American communities while interrupting the school-to-confinement pipeline for Black girls. (nbwji.org)

Men Stopping Violence — An Atlanta-based organization with nearly four decades of experience using a community-based accountability model to end male violence against women. Men Stopping Violence is explicitly man-focused in its intervention design, training men and boys to disrupt the cultural norms that enable violence — making it particularly relevant to the accountability agenda outlined in this article. (menstoppingviolence.org)

Ms. Foundation for Women — One of the first funders of domestic violence shelters and sexual assault hotlines in the United States, now led by a Black woman and investing specifically in women-led movements at the intersection of race and gender violence. The Foundation funds many of the smaller, community-based Black organizations doing direct service work that national funders overlook. (ms.foundation.org)

Hampton University National Center for Black Family Life — As referenced in this article, the National Center for Black Family Life at Hampton University is the only HBCU-anchored research institution producing systematic annual data on the state of Black families in America. Philanthropic support for its research infrastructure directly strengthens the evidentiary foundation for evidence-based gender violence prevention across the sector. (ncbfl.org)

Girls for Gender Equity (GGE) — A Brooklyn-based organization founded by Joanne Smith in 2001 that works with Black and Brown girls and gender-expansive youth to dismantle the structural conditions that produce gender violence, including sexual harassment in schools and the criminalization of Black girls. GGE’s work bridges the early childhood and campus intervention tiers outlined in this article. (ggenyc.org)

If you are in immediate danger or need crisis support, contact the National Domestic Violence Hotline at 1-800-799-7233 (available 24 hours) or text START to 88788

Disclaimer: This article was assisted by ClaudeAI.