Fraternities, sororities sue Harvard over
single-sex club crackdown
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[December 04, 2018]
By Nate Raymond
BOSTON (Reuters) - A group of U.S.
fraternities and sororities on Monday sued Harvard University, saying
its crackdown on single-sex clubs amounted to sexual discrimination.
In lawsuits filed in federal and state courts in Boston, the group
challenged a policy that the Ivy League university adopted in 2016 and
began enforcing this academic year that Harvard said was intended to end
longstanding practices of exclusion at the elite school.
Harvard has long sought to stamp out single-sex clubs, which it stopped
formally recognizing in 1984. But groups known as "final clubs,"
informal social clubs a student joins before graduating, as well as some
fraternities and sororities have continued to operate off campus.
Under the policy, students who join single-sex clubs may not serve as
captains of sports teams or leaders of officially recognized student
clubs and cannot receive endorsement letters from college deans for
postgraduate fellowships.
The Cambridge, Massachusetts, university was discriminating against
students on the basis of their sex by punishing men and women who join
all-male or all female-organizations, the lawsuits alleged.
The policy was motivated by sexism, with Harvard incorrectly seeking to
link all-male organizations and fraternities to sexual assaults and
contending that single-sex organizations subordinate women, according to
the lawsuits.
"Harvard's sanctions policy seeks to dictate the sex of people with whom
men and women may associate and the gender norms to which men and women
must conform," the federal complaint said.
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Mugs bearing the school's logo are displayed for sale outside
Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts, U.S., June 18, 2018.
REUTERS/Brian Snyder
The policy has resulted in the elimination of nearly every women's
social organization, with Harvard administrators privately calling
them "collateral damage" in their effort to punish men who join
all-male groups, according to the complaint.
"Harvard should get out of the business of trying to dictate who
students spend their time with off campus," Stanton Jones, a lawyer
for the sororities and fraternities, said in a statement.
Harvard had no immediate comment.
The federal lawsuit was brought by the fraternities Kappa Alpha
Theta, Sigma Chi and Sigma Alpha Epsilon and the sorority Kappa
Kappa Gamma, as well as three students.
The state court case was filed by the international sorority Alpha
Phi and a local chapter, as well Delta Gamma Fraternity Management
Corp, which supports chapters of the Delta Gamma sorority.
Harvard's policy violates Title IX, the federal civil rights law
that bans discrimination on the basis of sex, the U.S. Constitution,
the Massachusetts constitution and the state's Civil Rights Act, the
lawsuits claim.
(Reporting by Nate Raymond; Editing by Scott Malone and Jeffrey
Benkoe)
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