15 HBCUs Launch a National Research Coalition — and It Could Change Everything

Physics Lab Monitor

The HBCU research coalition known as AHRI is here, and Black higher education hasn’t seen a coordinated move like this in a long time.

Fifteen historically Black colleges and universities officially launched the Association of HBCU Research Institutions on April 29, 2026, at Howard University in Washington, D.C. The coalition — backed by a $1.05 million grant from the Harvard & the Legacy of Slavery Initiative — is designed to do something that individual HBCUs have struggled to do alone: compete for, and win, a larger share of the nation’s research dollars.

This isn’t just another partnership announcement. It’s a structural shift in how HBCUs approach research, funding, and national visibility — and the timing couldn’t be more deliberate.

Why the HBCU Research Coalition Matters Right Now

Here’s the number that puts everything in context: HBCUs receive less than 1% of available federal funding for higher education. That’s across roughly 100 institutions, many of which have been producing groundbreaking research for decades — from prostate cancer studies at Texas Southern University to radiation technology innovation at Hampton University — with a fraction of the resources that predominantly white institutions take for granted.

AHRI exists to change that math. By bringing 15 of the most research-active HBCUs under one organizational roof, the coalition can pursue federal grants collectively, build shared infrastructure, and speak with a unified voice in Washington in a way that no single institution could manage on its own.

“Instead of each individual institution advocating for additional funding,” said one AHRI leader, “we now have an organization that can assist us in doing that — as opposed to each of us approaching the same problem alone.”

Who’s In — and What They Bring

The founding members of AHRI are not a random collection of schools. These are institutions that collectively account for 50% of all competitively awarded federal research funding among HBCUs. Howard University — the only HBCU to hold the R1 Carnegie Classification, the highest research designation in the country — anchors the group as its only R1 member. The remaining 14 institutions carry R2 designations and are actively working toward R1 status.

The full roster: Clark Atlanta University, Delaware State University, Florida A&M University, Hampton University, Jackson State University, Morgan State University, NC A&T State University, Prairie View A&M University, South Carolina State University, Southern University, Tennessee State University, Texas Southern University, Virginia State University, and the University of Maryland Eastern Shore.

Morgan State President David K. Wilson serves as AHRI board chair. Prairie View A&M President Tomikia LeGrande is vice chair, and Howard’s interim president Wayne A. I. Frederick serves as AHRI’s interim president.

“Together, we cover probably every industry, every sector… There’s power in us, collectively.” — Tomikia LeGrande, AHRI Vice Chair

The R1 Push Is Real — and Some Schools Are Already There

One of AHRI’s most concrete goals is getting more HBCUs to R1 status. To earn that designation, a university must spend at least $50 million annually on research and award at least 70 research doctorates per year. It sounds like a high bar — but several AHRI members are already knocking on the door.

NC A&T already exceeds R1 criteria in both doctoral production and research expenditures. Prairie View A&M crossed the $50 million research expenditure threshold in 2025 and is now focused on expanding its PhD programs in mechanical and electrical engineering. FAMU has framed R1 as a central part of its strategic vision.

Howard University’s R1 achievement — announced roughly a year ago — proved it’s possible. AHRI is built on the belief that it won’t be the last.

Harvard’s Role and What It Signals

The $1.05 million grant from the Harvard & the Legacy of Slavery Initiative is significant not just for the dollars, but for what it represents. Harvard formally acknowledged its historical ties to the slave trade in 2022 and committed to repairing that legacy through tangible investment. Funding AHRI is one of the most direct expressions of that commitment yet.

Harvard’s Office of Sponsored Programs will also provide hands-on technical assistance — helping AHRI member institutions strengthen their research administration, compliance infrastructure, and grant lifecycle management. That kind of institutional knowledge transfer is arguably as valuable as the grant itself.

Ruth Simmons, senior adviser to the Harvard president on HBCU engagement, put it plainly: “AHRI marks a powerful new chapter in the HBCU research landscape, bringing institutions that have too often worked in isolation into sustained collaboration with one another and with the country’s leading research universities.”

What AHRI Is Building Toward

Beyond the immediate funding goals, AHRI’s leadership is thinking about long-term economic impact — patents, startup spinouts, and jobs that flow from research commercialization. The coalition also plans to serve as a policy voice, bringing HBCU research priorities into national conversations in a more organized and persistent way.

AHRI is co-located with the Association of American Universities in Washington, D.C., which gives it proximity to the federal agencies and policymakers that control the research funding pipeline. That’s not an accident.

For HBCU students and faculty, the practical benefits could include expanded research opportunities, more competitive fellowship pipelines, and stronger pathways into doctoral programs. For the institutions themselves, R1 status brings increased prestige, higher faculty recruitment competitiveness, and access to funding streams that have historically been out of reach.

AHRI is a direct response to a long-standing inequity — and it’s built by the people who understand that inequity most intimately. James Crawford of Texas Southern said it best: “What we bring in research, what has not been widely recognized — this isn’t new. What this does is give us the opportunity to expand that impact.”

The HBCU community has always produced world-class scholars and ideas. AHRI is the infrastructure to make sure the world finally has to pay attention.