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David Luke

Chief Diversity Officer
University of Michigan-Flint

Education/Degree:

Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) Sociology ( University of Kentucky )

Discipline Area

Social & Behavioral Sciences

Societal Priority

Education - higher and postsecondary education;Organizational Behavior & Culture;Social Inequality & Stratification

Social Category Focus

Race & Ethnicity

About

A native of Grand Rapids, Michigan, Dr. David J. Luke worked as a Certified Public Accountant after graduating from Grand Valley State University before returning to higher education to study sociology at the University of Kentucky. Currently, Dr. Luke works as Chief Diversity Officer at the University of Michigan-Flint, where his research, broadly on multiracial organizations, informs his work.

Current Work

Dr. Luke's scholarship focuses primarily on understanding racial diversity in higher education. In his forthcoming book with Routledge Taylor & Francis Group, provisionally titled, "Affirmative Action and Black Student Success: Pursuing a 'Critical Mass' at Historically White Universities", he has done a mixed-method cross-national study on diversity initiatives and programs at three universities (two in the U.S. and one in Canada), where he looked at the impact of these initiatives on black student enrollments and completions at the universities. State context and restrictive legislation (e.g. bans on affirmative action) had a negative impact, while desegregation mandates had a positive impact. Further, Dr. Luke's research finds that state bans on affirmative action negatively impact black student enrollments at selective institutions only, but impacts completions at universities that are less selective as well. Finally, Dr. Luke is developing a critique of the impact of Canadian multiculturalism based on his interviews at three institutions.Now as a practitioner, Dr. Luke leverages his insights in his current role in efforts to create and assess effective diversity initiatives and programs that improve retention and graduation rates of students of color and other marginalized students on campus.

Research Area Keyword(s)

affirmative action; Critical Race Theory; Inequality; race and ethnicity