Abstract
Music education professional associations (MEPAs) are membership-based nonprofit organizations focused on advancing music education through actions including professional development, policy work, and advocacy. In this instrumental case study, we interviewed diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) leaders from MEPAs in the United States (N = 16) to elicit self-reports of their leadership experiences. Participants identified the deep, personal work involved in enacting and sustaining DEI efforts. They reported experiences of harm in DEI work and described progress toward liberation for people of color as a slow, exhausting slog. Participants’ responses also indicated movement toward intersectional approaches to equity and justice. MEPA DEI leader experiences have important implications for advancing equity and justice in music education, including the need for MEPA leadership to consider ways institutional logics create harm and take steps to support and uplift people who are striving for equity and justice within the organizations, including through compensation, solidarity, and structural changes.