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Risk Management - Hazing & etc. This forum covers Risk Management topics such as: Hazing, Alcohol Abuse/Awareness, Date Rape Awareness, Eating Disorder Prevention, Liability, etc.

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  #1  
Old 05-27-2014, 09:15 PM
honorgal honorgal is offline
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Originally Posted by MysticCat View Post
And what, specifically, do you think the biological differences and the gender differences relevant to this discussion are?
Biological and evolutionary differences in sex drive/sexual motivations. I think they are quite relevant.
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Old 05-27-2014, 11:32 PM
MysticCat MysticCat is offline
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Originally Posted by honorgal View Post
Biological and evolutionary differences in sex drive/sexual motivations. I think they are quite relevant.
How exactly are they relevant? Are you saying that biology and sex drive/sexual motivation trump personal responsibility or excuse ignoring the difference between right and wrong? Or that boys will be boys?

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Originally Posted by DeltaBetaBaby View Post
I disagree that being kicked out of college comes anywhere near a criminal penalty, and FERPA would prevent the university from saying anything about it being a rape case, anyhow.
When I took the bar exam, my application had to list every instance of school discipline I had ever received from high school on. I also had to provide transcripts from college. I can assure you that had I been kicked out of college, I would have had to explain why, and I would not have been able to sit for the bar exam until the expulsion had been fully explained and the bar was satisfied of my moral fitness. To say that being expelled from college for a felony I didn't commit would have had a significant impact on my ability to sit for the bar exam and earn a living is something of an understatement.

Obviously being expelled from college isn't the same as being sent to jail, but it is more like a criminal penalty than a civil one. The loser in a civil case generally pays money damages to the winner.

Like I said, I understand the challenges and the real consequences of not holding rapists accountable. But I can't support a remedy to that problem that ignores the real consequences of declaring innocent people guilty. That's simply trading one form of injustice for another form of injustice.
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  #3  
Old 05-27-2014, 11:59 PM
maconmagnolia maconmagnolia is offline
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Like I said, I understand the challenges and the real consequences of not holding rapists accountable. But I can't support a remedy to that problem that ignores the real consequences of declaring innocent people guilty. That's simply trading one form of injustice for another form of injustice.
I couldn't agree more.
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Old 05-28-2014, 12:37 AM
DeltaBetaBaby DeltaBetaBaby is offline
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Originally Posted by MysticCat View Post
How exactly are they relevant? Are you saying that biology and sex drive/sexual motivation trump personal responsibility or excuse ignoring the difference between right and wrong? Or that boys will be boys?

When I took the bar exam, my application had to list every instance of school discipline I had ever received from high school on. I also had to provide transcripts from college. I can assure you that had I been kicked out of college, I would have had to explain why, and I would not have been able to sit for the bar exam until the expulsion had been fully explained and the bar was satisfied of my moral fitness. To say that being expelled from college for a felony I didn't commit would have had a significant impact on my ability to sit for the bar exam and earn a living is something of an understatement.

Obviously being expelled from college isn't the same as being sent to jail, but it is more like a criminal penalty than a civil one. The loser in a civil case generally pays money damages to the winner.

Like I said, I understand the challenges and the real consequences of not holding rapists accountable. But I can't support a remedy to that problem that ignores the real consequences of declaring innocent people guilty. That's simply trading one form of injustice for another form of injustice.
I didn't say universities should declare innocent people guilty. I said they should have a lower standard of evidence than "beyond a reasonable doubt." Personally, I don't think not being able to go to law school is worse than rape. And what's your alternative? To just keep ignoring rape?

Let's say I catch a student cheating on an exam. Should the university not discipline them because it's their word against mine?

Last edited by DeltaBetaBaby; 05-28-2014 at 12:41 AM.
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  #5  
Old 05-28-2014, 01:06 AM
honorgal honorgal is offline
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Originally Posted by DeltaBetaBaby View Post

Let's say I catch a student cheating on an exam. Should the university not discipline them because it's their word against mine?
if all you had was your word and no evidence, then yes, a university should not (and wouldn't) discipline.
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  #6  
Old 05-28-2014, 01:14 AM
honorgal honorgal is offline
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Originally Posted by DeltaBetaBaby View Post
I didn't say universities should declare innocent people guilty. I said they should have a lower standard of evidence than "beyond a reasonable doubt." Personally, I don't think not being able to go to law school is worse than rape. And what's your alternative? To just keep ignoring rape?
If you were a college administrator, based on the factual evidence that has been released, how would you rule on the Jameis Winston' case?
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  #7  
Old 05-28-2014, 08:02 AM
MysticCat MysticCat is offline
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Originally Posted by DeltaBetaBaby View Post
I didn't say universities should declare innocent people guilty. I said they should have a lower standard of evidence than "beyond a reasonable doubt." Personally, I don't think not being able to go to law school is worse than rape. And what's your alternative? To just keep ignoring rape?
False dichotomy. The alternative is to work toward a system that better protects and balances the rights of the accuser and the rights of the accused. The bottom line is that I don't think a lower standard of proof, or ideas like treating multiple accusations as proof of the truth of the allegations (they might be, they might not) will solve the problems, and I have little confidence that in practice they'd be workable. I see them leading to a whole different set of problems.

As for my law example, you're missing my point. Of course, not being able to go to law school isn't worse than rape. I'm talking about the possible consequences of a school undertaking the kind of process you're talking about and getting it wrong. I'm talking about the possible consequences of a student being expelled from school for something, a very serious something, he didn't do.

And yes, if a university expels a student for rape, then they are declaring him guilty of rape. Not guilty in a criminal law sense, but guilty in the practical, 'he raped someone" sense.

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Originally Posted by honorgal View Post
Oh good grief, no. They are relevant for the self evident reason that it's women who are overwhelmingly complaining about the status quo and men are not. That would suggest that women perceive and react to hookup culture differently than men do, and while some of that difference is socialization, it's also biological and evolutionary differences in males and females. The former is amenable to forced change, the latter is not.
Thank you for finally explaining what you mean instead of assuming we'd accurately guess what you mean. As a male, I don't think biology plays nearly the role you seem to—I think what you're calling biology I would call socialization as to what culture says it means to be male or female.
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Old 05-28-2014, 10:11 AM
honorgal honorgal is offline
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Originally Posted by MysticCat View Post
False dichotomy. The alternative is to work toward a system that better protects and balances the rights of the accuser and the rights of the accused. The bottom line is that I don't think a lower standard of proof, or ideas like treating multiple accusations as proof of the truth of the allegations (they might be, they might not) will solve the problems, and I have little confidence that in practice they'd be workable. I see them leading to a whole different set of problems.

As for my law example, you're missing my point. Of course, not being able to go to law school isn't worse than rape. I'm talking about the possible consequences of a school undertaking the kind of process you're talking about and getting it wrong. I'm talking about the possible consequences of a student being expelled from school for something, a very serious something, he didn't do.

And yes, if a university expels a student for rape, then they are declaring him guilty of rape. Not guilty in a criminal law sense, but guilty in the practical, 'he raped someone" sense.

Thank you for finally explaining what you mean instead of assuming we'd accurately guess what you mean. As a male, I don't think biology plays nearly the role you seem to—I think what you're calling biology I would call socialization as to what culture says it means to be male or female.
I came of age in the era when nurture was assumed to account for almost all differences and that was also my viewpoint. Since then, the scientific community has made a lot of discoveries about the biological differences. There is certainly still a debate about the exact percentage that is nature vs nurture* but there's no longer much scientific debate that biology plays more than a minor role.

* ETA that there is also an interesting debate about how these two intersect

Last edited by honorgal; 05-28-2014 at 10:37 AM.
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  #9  
Old 05-28-2014, 10:16 AM
DrPhil DrPhil is offline
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Originally Posted by honorgal View Post
I came of age in the era when nurture was assumed to account for almost all differences and that was also my viewpoint.
Supposedly when did this era occur?

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Originally Posted by honorgal
Since then, the scientific community has made a lot of discoveries about the biological differences. There is certainly still a debate about the exact percentage that is nature vs nurture but there's no longer much scientific debate that biology plays more than a minor role.
Explain what that has to do with this topic.
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  #10  
Old 05-28-2014, 02:47 PM
DeltaBetaBaby DeltaBetaBaby is offline
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Originally Posted by MysticCat View Post
False dichotomy. The alternative is to work toward a system that better protects and balances the rights of the accuser and the rights of the accused.
This is where you and I differ. I view the removal of a rapist from campus not just as a means of protecting the victim, but as a means of preventing more rape (and not in the "he'll go rape off-campus" sense, in the "rapists faced with consequences will stop raping" sense). But even so, if a lower standard of proof isn't the solution, what alternatives do you see?

Last edited by DeltaBetaBaby; 05-28-2014 at 02:50 PM.
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  #11  
Old 05-28-2014, 03:30 PM
honorgal honorgal is offline
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Originally Posted by DeltaBetaBaby View Post
This is where you and I differ. I view the removal of a rapist from campus not just as a means of protecting the victim, but as a means of preventing more rape (and not in the "he'll go rape off-campus" sense, in the "rapists faced with consequences will stop raping" sense). But even so, if a lower standard of proof isn't the solution, what alternatives do you see?
Seems like this could be argued for rape anywhere, not just on the college campus. And for murder as well. Instead, we've based our system of justice on the presumption of innocence and Blackstone's formula.
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  #12  
Old 05-28-2014, 03:43 PM
MysticCat MysticCat is offline
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This is where you and I differ. I view the removal of a rapist from campus . . . .
But that's not what I'm talking about. I'm talking about what I think is an increased risk that lower standards of proof and consideration of evidence that would not be admissible in court regardless of the standard of proof will result in the removal from campus of a person who isn't a rapist.
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  #13  
Old 05-28-2014, 09:27 PM
MysticCat MysticCat is offline
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Right, and I'm saying that protecting innocent women from being raped is at least as important as protecting innocent men from being thrown off of campus.
I agree. But my problem, at least in part, is practical: Throwing innocent men of campus does nothing to protect innocent women from being raped. You noted two benefits of removal of the rapist from campus:
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Originally Posted by DeltaBetaBaby View Post
I view the removal of a rapist from campus not just as a means of protecting the victim, but as a means of preventing more rape (and not in the "he'll go rape off-campus" sense, in the "rapists faced with consequences will stop raping" sense).
How does removal of an innocent man from campus stop him from raping if he wasn't raping to begin with? How does it protect the victim?

I don't know what the answer is, though I tend to think it lies with the courts rather than with colleges. I just don't think most colleges are equipped to effectively handle this kind of process. Regardless, I can't be supportive of any system that operates on the presumption that it's acceptable for the occasional innocent man to be kicked off campus, and quite possibly suffer long-term consequences for being labeled a rapist, for something he didn't do just because some people think that on the whole the greater good is served by that system. I don't think that's justice for anyone, including the accuser.
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  #14  
Old 05-28-2014, 01:02 AM
honorgal honorgal is offline
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How exactly are they relevant? Are you saying that biology and sex drive/sexual motivation trump personal responsibility or excuse ignoring the difference between right and wrong? Or that boys will be boys?
Oh good grief, no. They are relevant for the self evident reason that it's women who are overwhelmingly complaining about the status quo and men are not. That would suggest that women perceive and react to hookup culture differently than men do, and while some of that difference is socialization, it's also biological and evolutionary differences in males and females. The former is amenable to forced change, the latter is not.

So, the big question is how do we reduce the risk of women being victimized? Telling them that they are sexually equivalent to men doesn't seem to be doing much for a lot of college women. It seems the new method will be to impose an impossibly unfair adjudication standard that, in your own words, is trading one form of injustice for another form of injustice. And turn our colleges into lawsuit factories.

Last edited by honorgal; 05-28-2014 at 01:15 AM.
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  #15  
Old 05-28-2014, 07:53 AM
DrPhil DrPhil is offline
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Originally Posted by honorgal View Post
Oh good grief, no. They are relevant for the self evident reason that it's women who are overwhelmingly complaining about the status quo and men are not. That would suggest that women perceive and react to hookup culture differently than men do, and while some of that difference is socialization, it's also biological and evolutionary differences in males and females. The former is amenable to forced change, the latter is not.

So, the big question is how do we reduce the risk of women being victimized? Telling them that they are sexually equivalent to men doesn't seem to be doing much for a lot of college women. It seems the new method will be to impose an impossibly unfair adjudication standard that, in your own words, is trading one form of injustice for another form of injustice. And turn our colleges into lawsuit factories.
Explain the biological sex differences that are less subject to change. What are the differences?

As for gender differences: While I am a feminist gender egalitarian, the average person around the world (and average college student) does not subscribe to the belief that women and men are or should be (socially) the same. Therefore, most people believe in gender differences (there is longstanding debate about differences and whether any type of difference is bad) and forms of gender inequality are alive and well on most college campuses despite co-ed classrooms (and some schools have co-ed residence halls) and some women being more sexually liberated. There is more to gender equality and challenging gender norms than a free flow (pun intended) of drinking and sex.

Last edited by DrPhil; 05-28-2014 at 08:20 AM.
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