A Catalyst for Change
After leading the National Council of La Raza for more than 30 years,
Raul Yzaguirre takes his fight for civil rights to Arizona State University.
By Garry Boulard
TEMPE, Ariz.
Raul Yzaguirre takes note, with pleasure, of the
growing number of minorities making up Arizona State University’s
student enrollment — 31 percent in the fall of 2004.
“The Latino student percentage at Arizona State University is not,
of course, equal to the Latino percentage in the local community,” he
says. “But we are making significant progress in that area, and have
seen increases in the numbers last year and the year before that.”
In fact, Hispanics at ASU now make up more than 12 percent of the
student body, at 7,325 out of a total student enrollment of 61,033. And
they saw their numbers increase by about 7.5 percent this academic year
over the year before. By comparison, Hispanics compose roughly 60
percent of the general population in the greater Tempe-Phoenix area, a
percentage that is expected to grow in the years ahead.
After
serving on the national stage as the president and CEO of the National
Council of La Raza, it makes sense that Yzaguirre is interested in the
racial and ethnic dynamics of ASU. Last January, after working with
NCLR since the mid-1970s and seeing it emerge as the most influential
Hispanic policy institute in the country, Yzaguirre announced that he
was joining the ASU faculty (see Black Issues In Higher Education, Jan. 27, 2005).
His charge? To develop a Hispanic-based community development
institute and assist the school’s efforts to raise money, recruit
minority faculty and students and establish partnerships with minority
groups. It was a move that was widely seen as a major coup for the ASU
community, which has thoroughly embraced him in the past year.
“He has proven himself to be a major force here,” says ASU President
Michael M. Crow, “showing us that he is not just a moving-forward kind
of guy, but also someone who instinctively understands the core issues
related to community development and civil rights and knows how to get
things done.”
Says Alonzo Jones, the past president of the ASU African American
Alumni chapter and current director of the school’s multicultural
student services, “What has been most interesting to me is how the
students here have received him. Almost from the moment he got here he
made a point of reaching out to other communities on the ASU campus and
really interfacing with them.”