CHAPEL HILL (May 22, 2026) – Once again, the University of North Carolina has become a culture-war battleground with the recent denial of tenure for Kiran Asher.
Asher was one of six professors that the UNC-Chapel Hill Board of Trustees considered for new tenured appointments on May 13.1 Provost Magnus Egerstedt, along with faculty, had already signed off on Asher being named a distinguished professor in the department of women’s and gender studies.2
The denial of tenure for Asher has sparked concern among faculty and higher education observers because of what the decision might signal about the role of the UNC-Chapel Hill Board of Trustees.
This controversy raises renewed questions about governance, academic independence, and whether political oversight is increasingly reshaping the university’s traditional processes.
It echoes an earlier dispute around the 2021 tenure battle involving journalist and scholar Nikole Hannah-Jones.3
The delay of Hannah-Jones’ appointment to UNC-Chapel Hill sparked a national backlash and became an early symbol of how national culture wars were reshaping North Carolina higher education. The university endured allegations of ideological interference before eventually granting tenure.
A Shift in the Role of Trustees?
Historically, UNC-Chapel Hill’s Board of Trustees voted on tenure recommendations in blocks, largely treating approvals as confirmation of an already rigorous internal academic process rather than as opportunities for independent evaluation.
The tenure process itself is designed to be exhaustive, with years of scrutiny involving departmental review, peer evaluation, external recommendations, administrative oversight, and multiple opportunities for rejection. Candidates can be denied tenure at virtually any point along the process.
By the time a recommendation reaches the Board of Trustees, the expectation has traditionally been that extensive academic vetting has already occurred. That history makes recent interventions notable.
Critics argue that trustees denying tenure at the final stage represents a fundamental departure from long-standing norms and potentially an overreach into academic matters traditionally entrusted to faculty and university leadership.
Supporters of trustee involvement, meanwhile, contend governing boards have a legitimate oversight role and final fiduciary responsibility over university appointments.
The concern is not merely procedural. It is existential: Who ultimately governs academic standards at public universities?
When Governance and Academic Judgment Collide
Public universities occupy a unique position. Taxpayer-funded institutions are accountable to elected officials and governing boards, but they also rely heavily on faculty expertise to maintain academic quality, research credibility, and institutional legitimacy.
Tenure decisions have traditionally reflected that balance.
Faculty members evaluate scholarship, teaching, research contributions, and professional standing through discipline-specific expertise. Trustees, by contrast, historically focused on broader institutional stewardship. Their role was to advise and support, not to get involved in operations.
The core concern raised by critics of the Asher decision is not whether trustees have technical authority to vote on tenure. They clearly do. Rather, critics question whether exercising that authority is institutional overreach.
The “Exodus” Concern
Reports of faculty departures from UNC-Chapel Hill and concerns about recruitment have contributed to narratives of institutional instability.4
For universities, reputation functions as currency. It affects rankings, philanthropic investment, partnerships, and faculty recruitment. A campus repeatedly associated with political controversies risks being viewed less as an independent scholarly institution and more as a contested political arena.
A National Debate Over University Governance
Across the country, public universities have seen growing debates over trustee authority, faculty governance, curriculum oversight, and the appropriate balance between democratic accountability and institutional independence.4
This criticism extends to the University of North Carolina System’s Board of Governors itself. Appointed by state legislators, the board inevitably reflects political priorities. The challenge lies in balancing democratic accountability with respect for academic expertise and institutional independence.5
A Defining Moment for UNC
The UNC System has long enjoyed a national reputation as one of the nation’s strongest public university systems, balancing public accountability with academic excellence. That reputation now faces a new test.
University leaders and governing boards must navigate a difficult reality: Maintaining public trust while preserving confidence in the integrity of academic institutions.
Communication is critical, and currently there is not a clear message from the Board of Trustees or the University’s administration on what drove this decision. Without any communication, we can expect people to draw their own inferences. Some may be correct. Others completely wrong.
Either way, this will be a big, unnecessary mess that hurts the University’s brand and reputation.
People want to support the University and give its leadership the benefit of the doubt. But unless the Board of Trustees or the Chancellor provide some guidance, they can’t do it and this decision will be yet another black mark on Carolina.
Either way, the consequences extend beyond one professor or one department. The answer may shape not only UNC-Chapel Hill’s reputation, but the future relationship between governance and scholarship across the entire UNC System.
1 https://www.theassemblync.com/news/education/higher-education/unc-trustees-reject-hiring-tenured-womens-studies-professor/
2 https://www.dailytarheel.com/article/unc-board-of-trustees-denied-tenure-to-womens-and-gender-studies-professor-despite-approval-of-provost-20260515
3 https://www.publicedworks.org/2021/07/nikole-hannah-jones-what-are-we-afraid-of/
4https://www.publicedworks.org/2023/08/exodus-from-chapel-hill/
5 https://www.nytimes.com/2026/03/30/us/politics/unc-civics-school-conservative-debate.html

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