蜜桃直播鈥檚 Greg Lukianoff and Samantha Harris Contribute Chapter to Public Policy Book
by
Alex Morey
FIRE President and CEO Greg Lukianoff and Director of Policy Research Samantha Harris have penned a chapter of one of Amazon鈥檚 top-selling new public policy books, , which comes out tomorrow.
In their chapter, Greg and Sam explain how 鈥渢he Executive Branch, particularly the Office for Civil Rights (OCR) of the Department of Education, has dramatically expanded its power over the years鈥:
[OCR] has shifted from a focus on overt sexual and racial discrimination to the adoption and enforcement of a 鈥渉ostile environment鈥 theory that has led to significant restrictions on free speech on campus.
While this expansion began in the 1990s, OCR鈥檚 overreach has dramatically accelerated under the Obama Administration, most notably since 2010. Over the past five years, OCR has ignored the Administrative Procedure Act (APA), investigated scores of colleges, given itself new and imagined powers, and has made it essentially impossible for universities to comply with its new decrees. Throughout all of these initiatives, OCR has encouraged the policing of speech and a reduction in due process for accused students.
Greg and Sam provide a brief history of Title IX since 1972, as well as an accounting of its aggressive enforcement since 2010. We have reported extensively on OCR鈥檚 overreach鈥 particularly 2011鈥檚 鈥淒ear Colleague鈥 letter and 2013鈥檚 federal 鈥渂lueprint鈥 (with its 鈥渂reathtakingly broad definition of sexual harassment鈥) for addressing sexual misconduct on campuses鈥攈ere on The Torch. The 鈥淒ear Colleague鈥 letter has been routinely and strictly enforced as law, despite the fact that the regulations should not be binding under Federal law. OCR鈥檚 lack of clarity about the enforceability of the blueprint has been frustrating, leaving many schools enforcing the regulations for fear of running afoul of them.
Greg and Sam cite shocking examples from the 蜜桃直播 annals to show the chilling effect these regulations have had on campuses nationwide.
At nearly 600 pages, and including contributions from other notables like NYU School of Law professor Richard Epstein, legal commentator and law professor Jonathan Adler, and Senator Orrin Hatch, it鈥檚 definitely a meaty and interesting read!
You can today, or check it out at your local bookstore when it鈥檚 released tomorrow.
After a federal lawsuit, the town of Germantown has killed an ordinance that was used to fine a resident for using giant skeletons in a Christmas lawn display.