Fundamental Fairness in Sexual Misconduct Adjudications: Evaluating Private Universities for Due Process Rights in their Policies and Procedures

dc.contributor.advisor

Rogerson, Kenneth S

dc.contributor.author

Gudavalli, Medha

dc.date.accessioned

2016-06-08T04:57:13Z

dc.date.available

2016-06-08T04:57:13Z

dc.date.issued

2016-06-08

dc.department

Public Policy Studies

dc.description.abstract

There is a national debate on how universities should respond to sexual assault, specifically the advantages and shortcomings of the campus adjudication Process. One major critique of university adjudication is that it does not provide the necessary due process rights to the accused and is therefore not fundamentally fair. This study seeks to assess this validity of this critique by seeing if sexual misconduct policies lack due process and if so, to what extent. This investigation is a comparative case study of 14 private higher education institutions, belonging to the Ivy Plus Society, analyzing their policy and procedure documents for indicators of due process. Findings show that schools are complying between 45% and 85% of due process indicators with an average of 65%. Colleges do lack due process rights and need to revise their policies and procedures to clearly present these rights. Key recommendations include guaranteeing a hearing procedure with impartial decision-makers and the opportunity to submit evidence and witnesses.

dc.identifier.uri

https://hdl.handle.net/10161/12385

dc.language.iso

en_US

dc.subject

sexual assault, due process, student misconduct, university, adjudication

dc.title

Fundamental Fairness in Sexual Misconduct Adjudications: Evaluating Private Universities for Due Process Rights in their Policies and Procedures

dc.type

Honors thesis

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