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  #1  
Old 01-22-2007, 10:36 AM
jaade124 jaade124 is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by PsychTau2 View Post
I think there's a small trend going on now where schools are choosing to control their expansion and will actually have a plan where they will add chapters every X number of years, and are already choosing which organizations will expand in what year.
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Yes my school is one of those schools. Its harder to expand on smaller campuses where greek life is not doing so well. Our enrollment for recruitment (as far as sororities go) has gone down more and more with each semester. People are just not as interested and because of that the sororities already established are suffering. Therefore, my school (which is private) has chosen to not allow any further expansion in order for the sororites already there to grow and try and reach total. However, what happens if a local wants to go national? Is that the same as expansion? There's been a rumor that one local is going national and that has the other sororities worried because that usually takes girls away from the rest of us (because of the allure of being a founding sister, not going through recruitment, etc. etc.). Any thoughts?

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  #2  
Old 01-22-2007, 10:39 AM
33girl 33girl is offline
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Originally Posted by jaade124 View Post
However, what happens if a local wants to go national? Is that the same as expansion? There's been a rumor that one local is going national and that has the other sororities worried because that usually takes girls away from the rest of us (because of the allure of being a founding sister, not going through recruitment, etc. etc.). Any thoughts?

In NPC's eyes, yes. In the school's eyes, maybe not. They might actually welcome it since then a lot of the liablility will get transferred onto the national whereas before it was all on the school.
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Old 01-22-2007, 03:30 PM
Tom Earp Tom Earp is offline
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I find this very odd when it comes to BGLOs.

Many schools will not allow GLOs to come on campus especially NPH if they are not reaching numbers for present houses.

NIC GLOs are sometimes denied as there are enough for that particular school and the school population.

Would really like to get more information concerning this type of situation.
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Old 01-22-2007, 03:56 PM
MysticCat MysticCat is offline
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Originally Posted by L.O.C.K. View Post
Is this process even legal? Like, if a group of guys wanted to start a chapter but an expansion ban was in place, couldn't they argue freedom of association and that it is infringing upon their rights as citizens/students?
Freedom of Association is protected by the First Amendment. It only prohibits the government from infringing on the right of freedom of association, so in this context, it only applies to public universities.

Beyond that, any college or university can choose what groups to recognize and what groups not to recognize. As long as such decisions are made on objective and evenly-applied criteria, there likely is not a problem. Just because a college doesn't recognize an org you belong to doesn't necessarily mean that the college is infringing upon any freedom of association rights.

The NAACP would be in a different catagory because of its political nature.

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Originally Posted by PsychTau2 View Post
That AFA resolution is not binding on any campus or fraternal organization. AFA is a professional association, and has no governance over anyone but itself. So, they can suggest and resolve, but not force and require.
Exactly. Resolutions like this tend to be sound and fury, signifying nothing.
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Old 01-22-2007, 04:55 PM
Tom Earp Tom Earp is offline
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Originally Posted by MysticCat View Post
Freedom of Association is protected by the First Amendment. It only prohibits the government from infringing on the right of freedom of association, so in this context, it only applies to public universities.

Beyond that, any college or university can choose what groups to recognize and what groups not to recognize. As long as such decisions are made on objective and evenly-applied criteria, there likely is not a problem. Just because a college doesn't recognize an org you belong to doesn't necessarily mean that the college is infringing upon any freedom of association rights.

The NAACP would be in a different catagory because of its political nature.

Exactly. Resolutions like this tend to be sound and fury, signifying nothing.

Interesting, but is it equal rights for all or just a few and who make the decisions?
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Old 01-22-2007, 05:05 PM
MysticCat MysticCat is offline
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Interesting, but is it equal rights for all or just a few and who make the decisions?
If you're talking about a private school, it's not a question of "rights" at all. The Constitution confers power on and limits the power of the federal government and defines the relationship of the federal government to the states and the states to each other; it simply doesn't apply to private institutions. And as PsychTau explained, even when the Constitution comes into play, purely social organizations don't have the protection that groups with political purposes have, since the freedom of association in the First Amendment is aimed primarily at association for the purpose of political (in the broadest sense) activity.
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Old 01-22-2007, 05:26 PM
FSUZeta FSUZeta is offline
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lock, my question is "are all groups (npc, nic, pan-hell, multi-cultural) banned at present from colonizing on your campus, or is it just asian fraternal organizations?

if it is all groups, then i think you are probably going to have to be patient. the admin. must have a reason for banning expansion at present. your only alternative would be to become a squeeky wheel and prove to the administration that the campus needs an asian fraternity and show how the campus would benefit from the addition of the fraternity.
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Old 01-23-2007, 12:35 AM
MaryAmanda MaryAmanda is offline
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Originally Posted by 33girl View Post
In NPC's eyes, yes. In the school's eyes, maybe not. They might actually welcome it since then a lot of the liablility will get transferred onto the national whereas before it was all on the school.
We have a local social sorority here at Tech who has tried twice in recent years to go national. SGA won't let them because we currently have 6 Panhellenics who are already struggling to keep quotas. (We also have about 22 fraternities who are doing just fine! Keep in mind, engineering school; 3 guys for every 1 girl on campus!) So to answer the query, from my experience, it counts as expansion even if it's a local trying to go national. Until Tech can sustain enough girls actually on the campus to exceed NPC's expectations, the local will remain local for the time being.
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Old 12-09-2007, 02:05 PM
preciousjeni preciousjeni is offline
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TTT with a question...

I'm aware of a private school that closed the expansion of Greek Life completely for a few years. Recently, they created a new Greek-wide policy (covers NPC, NIC, NPHC, NALFO, etc.) for expansion that was adopted and accepted, to my knowledge. The most recent news is that they are opening up expansion, but only to fraternities.

How is that possible? How much power to private school really have? And, how does Title IX play into the issue when students of the private school are receiving federal funds to attend the private school? Thoughts?
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Old 12-10-2007, 11:14 AM
gpb1874 gpb1874 is offline
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private schools can do pretty much anything they want in terms of recognizing organizations and prohibiting free speech/association. normally, they will set some sort of process in place for what can and can't be recognized and they have to follow those procedures (of course they can change them at any time as well). some private schools hold freedom of association/speech on high esteem and don't block it much, if at all. some are totally opposite and go the extreme of prohibiting it.

it does not matter if the students receive federal aid-it only matters if the university itself receives federal aid. Even then, I believe there are some loop holes-ie: if a private university receives federal money for a certain thing or a certain percentage, they are still exempt from upholding those freedoms. i can't be totally certain on that; i just remember a conversation a few years ago about it and that's about all i remember.

public schools can place restrictions on new organizations for valid reasons. As already mentioned, some do it because the existing chapters are not doing well (although a new chapter can actually re-energize interest in Greek life all together and not "take members away" from current chapters-they have not joined you yet, so what makes you think they will want to next semester?)

it can also be restricted because the university may not have the resources to administer more organizations. Gphiangel was (probably still is) in that situation because of many, many Greeks starting within a short time frame. With a limited staff and resources, it can be difficult for the university to provide a constant level of support to the organizations.
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