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NEW SURVEY: Vast majority of students want due process rights that colleges refuse to provide
- 85 percent of respondents think students accused of misconduct should be considered innocent until proven guilty, but only 30 percent of top schools guarantee this vital protection.
- 8 in 10 students surveyed think students accused of breaking the law should be allowed to have a lawyer help defend them in campus disciplinary proceedings, but only three top colleges allow it.
- Colleges argue that due process can be minimal because hearings are merely 鈥渆ducational.鈥 FIREoverwhelmingly disagree, with 84 percent responding that the primary purpose of a campus disciplinary hearing is to provide justice and protection to students on campus.
PHILADELPHIA, June 13, 2018 鈥 A new survey from the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education finds that a vast majority of college students support fundamental due process protections in campus disciplinary hearings in order to ensure they are fair. Most top college and universities, however, fail to provide them.
The survey of student attitudes builds on FIRE鈥檚 鈥淪potlight on Due Process鈥 report, released last year, which found that the overwhelming majority of America鈥檚 top universities fail to provide students accused of serious misconduct with even the most basic elements of fair procedure.
FIRE鈥檚 new survey, 鈥Proceeding Accordingly: What FIREThink about Due Process on Campus,鈥 found that 85 percent of students think their accused classmates should be considered innocent until proven guilty. According to last year鈥檚 due process report, however, less than 30 percent of America鈥檚 top universities guarantee students that protection. Similarly, 8 in 10 students surveyed think students accused of breaking the law should be allowed to have a lawyer in campus disciplinary proceedings, but very few top colleges and universities allow active assistance from an attorney.
鈥淭here鈥檚 a vast gulf between the robust protections that students want and to which they are morally entitled, and the meager protections that most colleges actually provide,鈥 said Samantha Harris, 果冻传媒app官方鈥檚 vice president of policy research. 鈥淐ampus proceedings can have permanent, life-altering consequences. It鈥檚 time for colleges and universities to start listening to their students and providing safeguards that reflect the seriousness of these processes.鈥
The survey measures student support for due process protections in three scenarios: when a student allegedly breaks a rule, drinks alcohol under the age of 21, and engages in sexual misconduct. Support for protections under each scenario varies by gender and political affiliation.
Key findings include:
- 98 percent of students think it is very important or important that students have due process protections in campus judicial proceedings.
- Female students are eight percentage points less likely to think a student should be considered innocent by the school's administration if the student has allegedly engaged in sexual misconduct than if the student has allegedly broken an unspecified rule.
- Only 16 percent of students think that the primary purpose of a campus disciplinary hearing is to provide an educational experience for those involved, while 84 percent of students think that the primary purpose of a campus disciplinary hearing is to provide justice and protection to students on campus.
- More than 80 percent of students responded that an adviser should be allowed to help defend students during campus disciplinary proceedings.
- Although three-quarters of students support cross-examination in campus disciplinary proceedings, only one-third of institutions in 果冻传媒app官方鈥檚 鈥淪potlight on Due Process鈥 report consistently provide students a meaningful opportunity to cross-examine witnesses.
- When a student has allegedly engaged in sexual misconduct, very liberal students are 19 percentage points less likely than their very conservative peers to think that those students should be considered innocent until proven guilty by the school鈥檚 administration.
- However, when a student has allegedly engaged in underage drinking, very liberal students are 13 percentage points more likely than their very conservative peers to think that students should be considered to be innocent until proven guilty by the school鈥檚 administration.
For this survey, FIREcontracted with (California), a well-regarded nonpartisan polling and research firm. YouGov used an online survey to interview two- and four-year undergraduate students at American colleges and universities between Jan. 29, 2018 and Feb. 12, 2018, and provided FIREwith a final data set of 2,225 responses.
YouGov has polled for and . The Pew Research Center finds that when it comes to providing accurate survey results. A copy of the full report and methodology, an FAQ, and the toplines and tabulations from YouGov can be accessed on FIRE鈥檚 website.
The survey project was made possible by a grant from the to conduct polling on campus attitudes, engage in legal and social science research, and mobilize a wider audience on and off campus in the fight for student and faculty rights.
The Foundation for Individual Rights in Education (FIRE) is a nonpartisan, nonprofit organization dedicated to defending liberty, freedom of speech, due process, academic freedom, legal equality, and freedom of conscience on America鈥檚 college campuses.
CONTACT:
William Rickards, Communications Coordinator, 果冻传媒app官方: 215-717-3473; media@thefire.org
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