The Department of Education's Office of Civil Rights had found Princeton University to be in violation of Title IX for its disciplinary procedures regarding sexual harrassment.
That clearly was discrimination, and could be sex discrimination in violation of title IX if applied unevenly with regard to sex. Furthermore, ethical principles require that both sides have a chance to present their case, and this chance was denied by Princeton.Tyler Kingkade wrote: Accused students also were provided reports that detailed the alleged misconduct, as well as the names of the committee members. During the committee review process, accused students could request that anyone with information about the accusations appear before the committee and could question them; accused students were permitted to have an adviser in the process, could submit character statements in writing and could make a closing statement, according to OCR. Reporting victims were not allowed any of these.
But the below disturbs me.
The problem is, first of all, our criminal courts use a "beyond a reasonable doubt" standard when it comes to sexual assault cases. This implies that our criminal jurisprudence stretching back two centuries violates the rights of rape survivors by insisting on a "beyond a reasonable doubt" standard. Furthermore, a cursory reading of the text of the law at issue is silent on the burden and standard of proof universities may use in campus disciplinary proceedings.Tyler Kingkade wrote: The agency also said Princeton violated the rights of rape survivors by using a standard of proof for sexual assault cases higher than the federally recommended standard, which requires a "preponderance of evidence" for responsibility.
http://www.justice.gov/crt/about/cor/co ... ixstat.php
Thus, the ban on sex discrimination would only require that the burden of proof and standard of proof apply equally despite the sex of the accused or the accuser. It would not mandate "preponderance of the evidence" as opposed to "clear and convincing evidence", let alone "beyond a reasonable doubt".
As to ethics, I do not believe that Princeton was required to use a "clear and convincing evidence:" standard, let alone a "beyond a reasonable doubt standard", as opposed to a "preponderance of the evidence standard". that sasid, it is clear from the text of the law that Congress did not intend to determine what standard of proof must be used by universities- only that they apply equally with respect to sex.