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Scholarship: Journal of College and Character Volume 18, 2017 – Issue 1

Journal of College and Character

Volume 18, 2017; 1

Peer Reviewed Articles

It Happens, Just Not to Me: Hazing on a Canadian University Campus

Pages 46-63 | Published online: 16 Feb 2017
Kyle Massey () is a doctoral candidate in higher education leadership at the University of Texas at Austin and a lecturer in the Faculty of Education at Memorial University of Newfoundland.

Jennifer Massey () is the director of student life at Memorial University of Newfoundland.

Research on hazing in higher education has primarily focused on Greek-letter organizations and athletes, with little research beyond these two subsets of college students. The purpose of this qualitative study was to explore the attitudes of students from the general student population at a Canadian university with regard to hazing and identify how students justify and legitimate hazing activities. The theories of groupthink and cognitive dissonance are used to interpret the results which are presented in three themes: (a) It isn’t hazing or it doesn’t count as hazing, (b) It is hazing, but it’s okay, and (c) It happens, just not to me.

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Scholarship: Visual Interpretations, Cartoons, & Caricatures of Student and Youth Cultures in University Yearbooks, 1898–1930

Hazing-related Scholarship: Journal of the Canadian Historical Association; Visual Interpretations, Cartoons, & Caricatures of Student and Youth Cultures in University Yearbooks,
1898–19301
Authors: E. Lisa Panayotidis et Paul Stortz

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Hazing News

Scholarship: Donelson Forsyth, Society of Personality & Social Psychology

Why do groups haze new members? 

 

Excerpt:

The list grows ever longer: Names like Harry Lew, Chucky Stenzel, Chad Saucier, Gabe Higgins, Donna Bedinger, J. B. Joynt…and now Robert Champion. Its the list of people killed by hazing. Champion died of “blunt force trauma” that occurred during the FAMU marching band’s “Crossing Bus C” ritual, when his classmates punched and slapped him as he walked down the aisle of the band bus. He suffered so many injuries, inflicted by so many hands, that prosecutors charged 11 members of the band with felony hazing.

Hazing should never happen, but it does. Hank Nuwer’s Wrongs of Passage documents in excruciating detail the way fraternity pledges at some universities are ritually beaten, ridiculed, harassed, and coerced into abusing alcohol and drugs. New members of sports teams are subjected to physical, psychological, and sexual abuse. The recent suicide of Marine Lance Corporal Harry Lew has been linked to hazing. Marching bands, clubs, schools, businesses, even churches: they psychologically and physically harm their newest members.

Hazing is an entrenched group practice, and has been documented in ancient and modern societies and in all parts of the world. It’s a remnant of the modern-day group’s origins in the primal horde, designed to humble newcomers, remind them of their lowly status, and teach them to respect the group’s chain of command and traditions. Hazing legitimizes the abuse of power by group leaders, who claim the practice will unify the group, weed out the weak and uncommitted, and give newcomers a chance to prove their worth (Cimino, 2011).

But hazing is the wrong way to achieve any of these outcomes. Research in social psychology, including the classic study conducted by Eliott Aronson and Jud Mills in the 1950s, suggests that individuals rate positively groups which cause them to suffer, but other research indicates people like groups that support and reward them even more (Lodewijkx, van Zomeren, & Syroit, 2005). When Raalte, Cornelius, Linder, and Brewer (2007) examined the effects of  two type of initiations—ones that involved group outings, swearing an oath, performing in skits, and doing community service and ones that involved kidnapping and abandonment, verbal abuse, physical punishment (spankings, whippings, and beatings), degradation and humiliation, sleep deprivation, alcohol abuse, running errands, and exclusion—they discovered the positive forms increased group unity. The negative forms backfired, creating tension and disunity in the group.

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Hazing News

the 911 tape calling for aid for Tim Piazza of Penn State

Here’s the full transcript of the call:

[Full Transcript] Beta Theta Pi 911 Call Recording Released

Dispatcher: 911. What is the address of your emergency?

McCann: Uh, 220 West Burrowes Street.

Dispatcher: You said 229?

McCann: 220. Two. Two. Zero. West Burrowes Street.

Dispatcher: OK, what’s your name?

McCann: Ryan McCann.

Dispatcher: And what’s going on today?

McCann: Ah, we have a friend who’s unconscious, he’s…hasn’t moved…probably going to need an ambulance.

Dispatcher: Ok, how old is he?

McCann: He is 19?…19 years old.

Dispatcher: And was he breathing?

McCann: He is breathing.

Dispatcher: Was there any alcohol or anything involved, do you know?

McCann: Yes, there is.

Dispatcher: Alright, we’ll get somebody over there, OK? If anything changes, call back and let us know.

McCann: Thank you very much. Buh-bye.

Dispatcher: You’re welcome. Buh-bye.

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Hazing News

MPR discusses deaths by hazing with Lianne Kowiak and Hank Nuwer

Here is the link to story and audio podcast

From the Minnesota Public Radio page of Kerri Miller

Some argue that hazing in college fraternities and athletics promote group cohesiveness and bonding.

But according to data compiled by Bloomberg News, there have been more than 60 fraternity-linked deaths in the past eight years.

Recent incidents include a student who died at Penn State. And at Carleton College in Minnesota, there was an alleged sexual assault following a hazing incident.

So why does hazing persist? How dangerous is it, and what can be done to stop it?

MPR News host Kerri Miller talked to hazing prevention advocate Lianne Kowiak who lost a 19-year-old son due to fraternity hazing, and journalist Hank Nuwer, who’s written many books on the subject of hazing.

Use the audio player above to hear their conversation.