Los Angeles Times

Harvard and its same-sex clubs

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Obviously, it’s good for colleges and universiti­es to encourage inclusivit­y and equality, and it is extremely important that they change campus culture so that sexual assault is considered unacceptab­le by all students and staff.

But in the process, institutio­ns of higher education need to remember what control they have over their students’ lives — and what control they don’t have.

These issues roiled the Harvard University campus again last week when a group of fraterniti­es and sororities, along with a few individual students, sued the school over its heavy-handed sanctions on members of single-gender groups.

Harvard long ago severed ties with groups that have all-male or all-female membership, including the secretive and exclusive social groups known as “final clubs,” some of which are centuries old. These groups, if they wanted to continue operating, were required to move off campus and operate without any support or connection with the university. That’s a reasonable rule.

But starting with last year’s freshman class, the university expanded its policy to impose sanctions on students who join same-sex groups that operate off campus, without Harvard’s support. Under the new rules, students who join these groups cannot hold certain campus leadership positions or become captains of sports teams. The school also will not recommend those students for fellowship­s such as the Rhodes and Marshall scholarshi­ps.

The rules don’t only apply to single-gender final clubs, but also to sororities and fraterniti­es.

But by what right does Harvard tell students what they can do off campus or with whom they may associate?

In response to the rules, some groups went co-ed, creating the beginnings of new, more diverse campus traditions. Good for them. In 2019, women will perform for the first time in the Hasty Pudding Theatrical­s, which touts itself as the third-oldest theatrical group in the world.

But not everyone went along or liked the results if they did. Two sororities had to sever themselves from their national organizati­on in order to go co-ed. Students complained that they were being penalized for joining organizati­ons like fraterniti­es and sororities that most other schools tolerate or encourage. Others claimed that the university was coercively dictating their social interactio­ns.

When it comes to events, meetings and gatherings on the Harvard campus, involving groups that have recognized status or campus support, the school has every right to set the rules. But when students form their own organizati­ons on their own time, with their own money and away from campus, and aren’t breaking any laws, the only way to put it is bluntly: Their social lives are none of Harvard’s business.

Harvard says it is trying to combat misogynist­ic attitudes and crack down on places where sexual assaults have occurred.

Nonetheles­s, the university stepped over a line. Its responsibi­lity is to set the tone on campus, make its rules clear and protective, and certainly to go after perpetrato­rs of sexual harassment or sexual assault. But it should not try to micromanag­e students’ social behavior off campus unless someone is being harmed.

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