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āChronicle of Higher Educationā Examines Derecognition of Christian Student Groups

Writing for last week, Christopher Shea took a thorough look at the legal and practical circumstances surrounding the California State University Systemās decision to derecognize the student group InterVarsity Christian Fellowship at the systemās 23 campuses because of the groupās refusal to adopt an āall-comersā policy. All-comers policies require groups to accept any student, even as a voting member or leader, and even when that student is hostile to the mission of the group, thus putting the core message and beliefs of the group at risk.
Shea covers the inconsistent legal precedent governing this issue, including the Supreme Courtās 2010 decision in Christian Legal Society v. Martinez, in which the Court held that an all-comers policy at the University of California Hastings College of the Law was constitutionally permissible. Shea notes the effect of this ruling: Many religious student groups are effectively driven off campus when forced to choose between maintaining control over their groupās message and direction or being officially recognized by their institutions.
InterVarsity leaders spoke out about the irony of religious groupsā freedom of association being endangered by the policy:
"The point of a nondiscrimination policy" in the clauses pertaining to religion "is to prevent a religious group from being stigmatizedāto treat them equally because of their religious function," said Gregory L. Jao, a national field director of InterVarsity. "We are being penalized by the very policy that was intended to protect us."
Having official recognition rescinded has concrete effects, as Shea explains:
InterVarsity is now barred from official events at which student groups recruit members; on some campuses, it must pay to rent space for meetings (though some Cal State branches waive fees, or reduce them, for unofficial groups). Mr. Jao said the total annual costs could hit $30,000 on some campuses, although Michael Uhlenkamp, a university spokesman, called that figure "highly inflated."
Whatever the numbers are, students should not have to bear an additional burden in order to gather on campus in a group led by someone who adheres to the religious tenets upon which the group was founded.
Check out the rest of for more about the controversy. For more on the legal background of all-comers policies, check out ¹ū¶³“«Ć½app¹Ł·½ās frequently asked questions on Martinez.
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