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US Senate, 2018
Today, students are making major investments to pursue higher education, which they correctly see as an opportunity to grow and challenge themselves and to develop skills that will better prepare them for their future. While students work hard to succeed in higher education, the last thing they should ever have to worry about is whether they are…
Descriptors: School Safety, Colleges, Prevention, Violence
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Curry, Susan J. – Journal of College and University Law, 1989
The paper addresses (1) lawsuits stemming from fraternity hazing incidents and their potential liability; (2) defenses raised by fraternities, universities, and individual defendants and the success or failure of those defenses; and (3) responses to the hazing problem (state legislation and specific university and fraternity anti-hazing policies).…
Descriptors: Court Litigation, Fraternities, Hazing, Higher Education
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Dixon, Mary – Journal of Law and Education, 2001
After providing recent survey evidence of significant widespread hazing of students in high schools, author calls for the enactment of stricter state anti-hazing laws to eliminate adverse impact of hazing on students' physical and mental well-being. Author also calls for increased educational efforts to reduce hazing. (PKP)
Descriptors: Discipline Policy, Hazing, High School Students, High Schools
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Pieronek, Catherine – Journal of College and University Law, 1999
Reviews 1998 cases of discrimination against students, focusing on discrimination on the basis of gender, ethnicity, and disability and on hazing. Cases did not usually involve the blatant discriminatory acts that inspired antidiscrimination legislation. They involved increasingly complicated and subtle forms of discrimination and required more…
Descriptors: College Students, Court Litigation, Disabilities, Ethnicity
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Richmond, Douglas R. – West's Education Law Reporter, 1989
Institutional responsibility for hazing injuries was called into question in a Delaware Superior Court in the case of "Furek v. University of Delaware." In ruling in the university's favor, the court signaled that universities may move to eliminate hazing without unreasonable fear of creating institutional liability for hazing incidents.…
Descriptors: Court Litigation, Discipline Policy, Fraternities, Hazing