Categories
Hazing News

Washington University update

Punished chapter throws party on suspension. What is an appropriate punishment in view of this party? http://www.studlife.com/forum/2018/02/15/staff-ed-fool-me-twice/

Editorial below is from the campus newspaper: It is well done.

On Sept. 14, 2017, Washington University’s chapter of Phi Delta Theta joined the ever-growing list of fraternity chapters that have been suspended after investigations into injuries or deaths related to illegal hazing activities. The suspension was originally announced as temporary but indefinite. Indefinite, as in without a clear end date. Indefinite, as in it’s not over yet.

But this past weekend, dozens of Washington University students attended a Mardi Gras party hosted at the Phi Delt house—a clear violation of the suspension, which prohibits the hosting of chapter meetings, activities and philanthropic events. Multiple sources confirmed to Student Life that party buses had been used to take trips off campus and pregame events had been hosted at the house, all under the Phi Delt name.

The Phi Delt members’ indisputable disregard for the relatively simple rules laid out for them represents a further demonstration of their lack of respect and overall unacceptable conduct.

For a fraternity, a suspension is kind of like a trial period to prelude a second chance. The Phi Delt members’ indisputable disregard for the relatively simple rules laid out for them represents a further demonstration of their lack of respect and overall unacceptable conduct. Phi Delt’s presence on campus isn’t one of classic fraternity boy rebelliousness; the things that they have done are quite literally crimes. Hazing, aside from being a deplorable and humiliating act, is illegal in the state of Missouri.

However, this burden not only lies on members and leaders of Phi Delt, but on the University administration. Student Life has confirmed that multiple sources submitted photos and videos of the violations to administrators, to which there has been no official, tangible University response. The lack of transparency and communication to students about the status of Greek life organizations is concerning, and it has safety implications for the ill-informed. Students not members of Greek organizations—and often those who are members, too—are left without a reliable, credible source and with only the rumor mill.

Part of Wash. U.’s job is to protect its students. Because the recent parties at the Phi Delt house were (knowingly) in violation of the suspension, they were unregistered. And because fraternity members can get into further trouble for hosting or participating in events at all, normal safety precautions go out the window. Sick or injured students are at best reluctant and at worst refuse to call Emergency Support Team or the Washington University Police Department. Furthermore, the unregistered parties are under the table and open door, meaning anyone (including nervous and naive freshmen) can attend them without the supervision of a designated sober contact.

A general sense of inaction on behalf of University officials, even after multiple reports of violations, represents their lack of resolve to commit to their own punishment. If the rules aren’t going to be enforced, why bother following them in the first place? Do we have to wait for someone to get badly hurt before meaningful action is taken?

In the words of a former Phi Delt in a comment on Student Life’s original coverage of the suspension, it’s “time to pay…[and] get some class.”

Categories
Hazing News

Why yes, hazing deaths do happen in Portugal: Fine piece by NY Times

Researching hazing deaths in Portugal this morn. https://www.nytimes.com/2014/03/19/world/europe/student-deaths-spark-debate-over-hazing-at-portugals-universities.html

LISBON — By almost any measure, Portugal’s universities have had a turbulent time. After the end of the country’s dictatorship in the 1970s, public education found itself overwhelmed by soaring numbers of young people seeking degrees. The unmet demand opened a market for private universities, generally regarded as being of lesser quality.

But where academic achievement has often failed to create distinction, hazing, known as praxes in Portuguese, has taken on a new and prominent place at the newer private universities, with some having their identity closely tied to the ritual. The situation thrust itself into the public debate here after the drowning deaths of six students during a suspected hazing ritual.

Since a jogger discovered the body of Pedro Negrão, 24, on Dec. 26 washed up near Meco Beach, south of Lisbon, a police investigation has yet to establish the precise circumstances surrounding the deaths. But before he left for the weekend, 11 days earlier, Mr. Negrão had told his parents that he was meeting with other students in a rented house to prepare hazing activities for their school, Lusófona University, founded in 1989.

The sole known survivor of the encounter, a fellow student, João Gouveia, has since been receiving psychological treatment and has not given his account of the events. No one has been charged and a court date could be three or four months away, according to Vítor Parente Ribeiro, the lawyer representing the families of the six victims.

“I think the university needs to give us some answers as to why these young people went to the beach,” Mr. Parente Ribeiro said.

Continue reading the main story

A Lusófona representative, Eugénia Vicente, said in an email that “at this moment in time there exists no evidence of a relation between any activity conducted by the university and the tragedy that took the life of six of our students.”

But in the vacuum of information surrounding the deaths, a fierce debate has broken out among the students, and in the society more broadly, over the value of hazing rituals that some credit with building esprit de corps among students, and others say have grown increasingly dangerous. Unlike at American universities, and others in Europe, hazing is not limited to fraternities or sororities, but is a general rite of initiation for first-year students.

At Portugal’s oldest public university, founded in 1290 in Coimbra, about 110 miles from Lisbon, hazing has a strong and storied tradition, and it is that legacy that universities with far shallower histories have tried to emulate.

Until two decades ago, “hazing in Lisbon simply didn’t exist,” said José Miguel Caldas de Almeida, a professor of psychiatry and former dean of the medicine faculty of Nova University, a state establishment. “Many of our universities, especially private ones, are of bad quality, so people are desperately trying to recreate the feeling that studying there is something special,” he said.

What he witnessed as a university dean, he added, was “more violent than the hazing that I saw in the army in Africa,” while serving there as a military doctor during Portugal’s colonial wars.

About 70 percent of Portuguese between 18 and 24 attend higher education, compared with 9 percent in 1974, when a revolution toppled Portugal’s dictatorship, according to Pedro Lourtie, a former Portuguese secretary of state for higher education. Yet in the 2013 Shanghai rankings of the world’s universities, no Portuguese university entered the top 300.

A dramatic change took place in the late 1980s and early ’90s, Mr. Lourtie said, when demand overwhelmed the public university infrastructure and opened the door instead to “a real business” of creating private universities.

Still, “the first choice of young people is to go to public universities,” Mr. Lourtie said. As for some of the private establishments, he added, “they want the recognition and probably overdo it sometimes in trying to show themselves as great universities.”

Diana Antunes, who is studying music in Lisbon after attending university in the city of Aveiro, said the drownings at Meco Beach “brought to the surface a real problem, which is that newer universities pretend they can be like Coimbra and use praxes to create an identity rather than focus on raising education.”

On a recent Saturday, she joined students outside Lusófona’s campus to pressure the government to ban praxes. Ms. Antunes, who is 28, said that not joining the ritual “makes you an outcast.” While studying in Aveiro, Ms. Antunes said, she experienced the pressure herself when she refused to join a hazing ritual that required simulating sexual intercourse, as well as licking yogurt from a boy’s lap. Her mother complained to the university, but no action was taken.

Still, other students have staged competing demonstrations in support of the hazing rituals. During a recent visit to Lusófona’s campus, students defended both the school’s reputation and its hazing activities.

Frederico Campos, the leader of the law faculty’s praxes, said that “none of our games are really risky or could lead to something like what happened on that beach.” Typically, he said, new students are encouraged to join games like playing soccer with a leg tied to that of a teammate, or having to walk across town blindfolded, with other students acting as their guides. Any alcohol-related problems or other abuses, he said, are reported to the university authorities or the police.

Another Lusófona student, Victor Santos, said hazing was “a great way to break the ice between students and give a sense of family belonging to people who come from everywhere.”

But since the deaths, Mr. Campos said, he has been the target of insults and even objects thrown at him while walking around Lisbon wearing his traditional black praxes outfit.

Portugal’s education minister has been discussing with universities how to deal with the praxes. After the drownings, Paula Teixeira da Cruz, Portugal’s justice minister, said, “A ban is not the solution.”

Even as the police investigation continued, TVI, a private television channel, recently aired a program aimed at reconstructing the Meco Beach tragedy. It showed students with their wrists tied and their backs to the ocean being forced by a hazing leader to take a step back into the water every time they answered a question wrong.

Ana Leal, a journalist from TVI, said that her research showed that braving the ocean’s waves on a winter night was considered “a normal game” at Lusófona. The university called the report “only media speculation.”

Still, even the parents of Mr. Negrão, an accomplished swimmer who studied business management at Lusófona and was in a four-year relationship and due to move in soon with his girlfriend, said their goal was merely to establish legal responsibility for the death of their son.

“We want to find out the truth, but not eliminate the praxes, because they’ve also made many students happy, including our son Pedro,” his mother, Maria Fátima Negrão, said.

Categories
Hazing News

Legal matters: assumption of risk in sexual hazing case

Assumption of risk. You make the call (slower load but worth the wait) http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/catl.30425/full

Categories
Hazing News

Unity on Philippine agend to pass antihazing law improvements

Here is the link and an excerpt

Metro Manila (CNN Philippines, February 12) — Voting 19-0, the Senate on Monday approved on third and final reading a bill completely banning hazing as a requirement for admission into a fraternity, sorority, or organization.

Senate Bill No. 1662, which seeks to amend Republic Act No. 8049 or the Anti-Hazing Law, aims to strengthen the existing measure and regulate other forms of initiation rites.

It defined hazing as “any physical or psychological suffering, harm or injury inflicted on a recruit, member, neophyte, or applicant for admission or continuing membership into the fraternity, sorority or organization.”

The existing law allows hazing as part of an initiation rite if there is a written notice addressed to the school a week before the event.

The House approved its version of the bill on January 22.

READ: House OKs new anti-hazing bill on third and final reading

Senator Panfilo Lacson, chair of the Senate committee on public order and dangerous drugs, said the bill will cover not only hazing activities in schools, but also in the Armed Forces of the Philippines, Philippine National Police, Philippine Military Academy, and Philippine National Police Academy.

Lacson added the bill requires fraternities, sororities, and organizations to submit an application to school authorities for the initiation rite, detailing the activity within seven days prior to the scheduled date.

School authorities should then monitor, record, and report that no hazing was conducted in the initiation rites.

The bill penalizes violators with up to life imprisonment or a fine of up to P3-million, if a hazing rite leads to death, rape, sodomy, or mutilation. Other penalties will be imposed for lesser violations.

The school would also be held liable and be imposed a P1 million fine if its officials failed to prevent hazing

Licenses of professionals involved in acts of hazing would also be revoked for up to three years, which may then be reinstated after affidavits certifying the individuals’ good moral standing are submitted.

The filing of the bill follows the hazing death of University of Santo Tomas freshman law student Horacio “Atio” Castillo in the hands of Aegis Juris Fraternity members on September 2017.

Categories
Hazing News

Beta trainer and adviser resigns at Penn State

Here is the link and an excerpt

“Jim and Evelyn Piazza are pleased to see Tim Bream gone from Penn State”, attorney Tom Kline said in a statement.