The University of Texas at Austin has announced a sweeping academic restructuring that will consolidate four departments into a newly created Social and Cultural Analysis department. The move, first reported by The Texas Tribune and distributed by The Associated Press, is expected to be completed by September 2027.The departments set to be merged are African and African Diaspora Studies, American Studies, Mexican American and Latino Studies, and Women’s, Gender and Sexuality Studies. University leaders informed department heads of the decision on Thursday, according to the report.
Social and cultural analysis department to be formed
University officials said the consolidation follows an internal academic review that found “significant inconsistencies and fragmentation” across departments within the College of Liberal Arts. The restructuring is intended to streamline administrative operations and align related disciplines under a broader academic framework.More than 800 students are currently pursuing majors, minors and graduate degrees across the affected departments, according to Save UT, a faculty group that has publicly opposed the merger. Faculty members have raised concerns about the future of specialised programmes and the broader academic direction of the university.Julie Minich, a professor of Mexican American and Latino Studies and English, criticised the move, saying it reverses decades of intellectual progress and innovation. Faculty critics argue that independent departments allow for focused scholarship and stronger academic identity.University President Jim Davis stated in a notice to students, faculty and staff that students already enrolled in the affected programmes will be allowed to complete their degrees within the new departmental structure. A curriculum review has begun to determine which majors and minors will continue to be offered once the consolidation is finalised.
European language departments to merge separately
In a separate restructuring decision, the university will combine Germanic Studies, Slavic and Eurasian Studies, and French and Italian into a new Department of European and Eurasian Studies.Officials said the aim is to reduce duplication in teaching and research while strengthening interdisciplinary collaboration. The university has not yet detailed how specific language majors and graduate programmes will be structured under the new department.
Broader political context
The restructuring comes at a time when universities in Texas are facing growing political scrutiny over how they address subjects related to race, gender and sexuality.In 2023, the Texas Legislature passed Senate Bill 17, which banned diversity, equity and inclusion offices at public universities while explicitly exempting classroom instruction and scholarly research. In 2025, Senate Bill 37 transferred curriculum oversight authority from faculty bodies to governor-appointed regents. Earlier drafts of that bill included language seeking to limit certain academic content, but those provisions were removed before final passage.Last month, Texas A&M eliminated its women’s and gender studies programme. Federal officials have also urged UT-Austin and several other institutions to sign a compact linking access to certain grants with commitments related to defining sex based on reproductive function and reviewing academic units perceived as ideologically biased.University officials have not stated that the mergers will eliminate instruction on race, gender or sexuality. The consolidation process is scheduled to conclude by September 2027, following the completion of the curriculum review and departmental restructuring.
