WHY ARE Some Members of Congress Opposing Due Process Protections for Black Male Students?
During the Senate HELP Committee’s 2015 hearing on campus sexual assault, Harvard Law Professor Janet Halley made the surprising observation that in her experience, “male students of color are accused and punished at ‘unreasonably high rates’ in campus sexual misconduct investigations.” Two years later, journalist Emily Yoffe posed this question in The Atlantic: “Is the system biased against men of color?” explaining, “black men make up only about 6 percent of college undergraduates, yet are vastly overrepresented in the cases I’ve tracked.” Lara Bazelon, director of the racial justice clinics at the University of San Francisco School of Law, likewise has opined about the troubling racial dynamics at play under the current Title IX system, and urged Education Secretary Betsy DeVos to “take important steps to fix these problems.”
During this time of national reflection on race relationships, stories mount of black men whose lives were irrevocably harmed by false allegations or poorly administered campus tribunals. The examples of unfair treatment are numerous and egregious.
More recently, Title IX For All analyzed demographic data from the approximately 650 lawsuits filed against institutions of higher education since 2011. Among the 30% of cases in which the race of the accused student was known, black students are four times as likely as white students to file lawsuits alleging their rights were violated in Title IX disciplinary proceedings. Title IX For All concludes, “These findings come at a time when public officials who have long regarded themselves as champions of civil rights for minorities suspected or accused of crimes advocate a heightened awareness of their rights, while simultaneously working to undermine their rights in higher education settings.”
The new Title IX regulation will ensure fairness, equitability, and credibility, and will support and assist sexual assault complainants, as well. Some members of Congress in both the Senate and the House of Representatives have urged Secretary DeVos to rescind the new regulation with vague claims that it is harmful to students. At a time when activists across the country are clamoring that Black Lives Matter, why are some members of Congress opposed to a regulation that will help improve the lives of black men? saveservices.org
From Black Student: IN COLLEGE I was Falsely Accused Of Sexual Harassment. Men Like Me Deserve Due Process.
From Black Christians: PARENTS OF Former Vanderbilt Football Player Charles Wright Break Silence
Black Students Four Times As Likely To Allege Rights Violations In TitleIX Proceedings