The Law of Higher Education, Student Version
eBook - ePub

The Law of Higher Education, Student Version

Student Version

William A. Kaplin, Barbara A. Lee, Neal H. Hutchens, Jacob H. Rooksby

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eBook - ePub

The Law of Higher Education, Student Version

Student Version

William A. Kaplin, Barbara A. Lee, Neal H. Hutchens, Jacob H. Rooksby

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A single-volume text that distills information for students

Based on the sixth edition of Kaplin and Lee's indispensable guide to the law that bears on the conduct of higher education, The Law of Higher Education, Sixth Edition: Student Version provides an up-to-date reference and guide for coursework in higher education law and programs preparing law students and higher education administrators for leadership roles.

This student edition discusses the most significant areas of the law for college and university attorneys and administrators. Each chapter is introduced by a discussion of key terms and topics the students will encounter, and the book includes materials from the full sixth edition that are most relevant to student interests and classroom instruction. It also contains a "crosswalk" that keys sections of the Student Edition to counterpart sections of the two-volume treatise.

  • Complements the full version
  • Includes a glossary of legal terms and an appendix on how to read legal material for students without legal training
  • Discusses key terms in each chapter
  • Concentrates on key topics students will need to know

This is fundamental reading for law students preparing for careers in higher education law and for graduate students in higher education administration programs.

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Informations

Éditeur
Jossey-Bass
Année
2020
ISBN
9781119271949
Édition
6
Sujet
Law
Sous-sujet
Public Law

PART ONE
PERSPECTIVES AND FOUNDATIONS

1
Overview of Higher Education Law

Chapter 1 provides background information on the reach of the law into virtually every aspect of higher education and develops the foundational principles and conceptual distinctions that have guided the law's ever-expanding reach. After brief overviews of how the law's impact on academia has expanded and the body of higher education law has evolved since the 1950s, the chapter explains how decisions concerning colleges and universities, and their personnel and students, are made (governance). The chapter then reviews the sources of higher education law, distinguishing between those from outside the institution (such as constitutions, statutes, and common law) and those from within the institution (such as policies and contracts). Differences in how the law treats public institutions versus private institutions are examined, as is the state action doctrine (which serves to require public institutions, but usually not private institutions, to comply with the individual rights guarantees of the U.S. Constitution). Differences in how the law treats private religious, versus private secular, institutions are also addressed. The chapter then concludes with an examination of the relationship between law and policy (institutional policy as well as public policy), and legal counsel's role in advising the institution on the development and implementation of policy.

Section 1.1. How Far the Law Reaches and How Loudly It Speaks

Law's presence on the campus and its impact on the daily affairs of postsecondary institutions are pervasive and inescapable. Litigation and government regulation expose colleges and universities to jury trials and large monetary damage awards, to court injunctions affecting institutions' internal affairs, to government agency compliance investigations, hearings, and fines, and even to criminal prosecutions against administrative officers, faculty members, and students.
Many factors have contributed over the years to the development of this legalistic and litigious environment. Students' and parents' expectations have increased, spurred in part by increases in tuition and fees and in part by society's consumer orientation and marketing efforts by colleges and universities to attract students. Higher education institutions have also served as epicenters of social and political division occurring in the larger society on a range of issues. The greater availability of data that measures and compares institutions, and greater political savvy among students and faculty, has led to more sophisticated demands on institutions.
In addition, advocacy groups have used litigation against institutions as the means to assert faculty and student claims—and applicant claims as well, in suits concerning affirmative action1 in admissions and employment. Contemporary examples of such groups include the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education (FIRE) (https://www.thefire.org); Students for Academic Freedom (see Section 7.1.4); Young America's Foundation (https://www.yaf.org); the Center for Law and Religious Freedom (https://www.clsnet.org/center/about), a project of the Christian Legal Society; the Student Press Law Center (https://splc.org); and the Center for Individual Rights (https://www.cir-usa.org), which has been particularly active in the cases on affirmative action in admissions. More traditional examples of advocacy groups include the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) (https://www.aclu.org) and the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, Inc. (https://www.naacpldf.org). National higher education associations also sometimes become involved in advocacy (in court or in legislative forums) on behalf of their members. The American Council on Education (https://www.acenet.edu/Pages/default.aspx), whose members are institutions, is one example; the American Association of University Professors (AAUP), whose members are individual faculty members, is another example (https://www.aaup.org; see Section 6.1.3 of this book).
In this environment, law is an indispensable consideration, whether one is responding to campus disputes, planning to avoid future disputes, or crafting an institution's policies and priorities. Institutions have responded by expanding their legal staffs and outside counsel relationships and by increasing the numbers of administrators in legally sensitive positions. As this trend has continued, more and more questions of educational policy have become converted into legal questions as well (see Section 1.7). Law and litigation have extended into every corner of campus activity.2
There are many striking examples of cutting-edge (and sometimes just wrong-headed) cases that have attracted considerable attention in higher education circles or have had a substantial impact on higher education. Students have sued their institutions for damages after being accused of plagiarism or cheating or after being penalized for improper use of a campus computer network; controversies over campus free speech have resulted in legal challenges involving student speech rights; objecting students have sued over mandatory student fee allocations; victims of harassment have sued their institutions and professors alleged to be harassers; students found in violation of institutional sexual misconduct policies have alleged violations of their due process or contractual rights; student athletes have sought injunctions ordering their institutions or athletic conferences to grant or reinstate eligibility for intercollegiate sports; student athletes or former athletes have also sued to be compensated for their athletic participation or the use of their image in marketing and merchandising; students with disabilities have filed suits against their institutions or state rehabilitation agencies, seeking accommodations to support their education; students who have been victims of violence have sued their institutions for alleged failures of campus security; hazing victims have sued fraternities, fraternity members, and institutions; parents have sued administrators and institutions after students have committed suicide; and former students involved in bankruptcy proceedings have sought judicial discharge of student loan debts owed to institutions. Disappointed students have challenged their grades in court, such as the student who filed suit claiming that being required to type led to his receiving a lower grade because he typed more slowly than other students, or the student who fell asleep during an exam and claimed that she was unfairly penalized on the basis of a disability. A student who received an “A” grade in an online class claimed in a lawsuit that a professor's removal of a comment thread from a discussion board for being non-germane to class discussion harmed her chances for future employment at the institution. Students and others supporting animal rights have used lawsuits (and civil disobedience as well) to pressure research laboratories to reduce or eliminate the use of animals. And another student, injured in a Jell-O wrestling event at a college residence hall party that he himself had organized, attempted to pin liability on his university.
Faculty members have been similarly active. Professors have sought legal redress after their institutions changed the professors' laboratory or office space, their teaching assignments, or the size of their classes or after research data or curricular materials were discarded when a faculty member's office was relocated. A group of faculty challenged their institution's decision to terminate several women's studies courses, alleging sex discrimination and violation of free speech. Female coaches have sued over salaries and support for women's teams. Across the country, suits brought by faculty members who have been denied tenure—once one of the most closely guarded and sacrosanct of all institutional judgments—have become commonplace. Increasing reliance by institutions on non-tenure-track faculty has resulted in contingent faculty seeking to advance their economic and professional interests, including through litigation and administrative actions involving their collective bargaining rights under federal or state law.
Outside parties also have been increasingly involved in postsecondary education litigation. Athletic conferences have been named as defendants in student athlete cases. University academic and athletic foundations have been the subject of lawsuits, including by donors or their families dissatisfied with the use of gifts. Universities have sued sporting goods companies for trademark infringement because they allegedly appropriated university insignia and emblems for use on their products. Broadcasting companies and athletic conferences have been in litigation over rights to control television broadcasts of intercollegiate athletic contests, and athletic conferences have been in disputes concerning teams leaving one conference to join another. Media organizations have brought suits and other complaints under laws requiring open meetings and public records. Separate entities created by or affiliated with institutions have been involved in litigation with the institutions. Drug companies have sued and been sued in disputes over human subjects research and patent rights to discoveries. And increasingly, other commercial and industrial entities of various types have engaged in litigation with institutions regarding purchases, sales, and research ventures. Community groups, environmental organizations, taxpayers, and other outsiders have also gotten into the act, suing institutions for a wide variety of reasons, from curriculum to land use. Recipients of university services have also resorted to the courts. For example, clients of a university's Center for Reproductive Health sued the university when the center gave fertilized embryos to unrelated couples without the consent of the parents of the embryos; another institution was sued for alleged mishandling of the cremated remains of a cadaver donated to the university's research program.
Other societal developments have led to new types of lawsuits and new issues for legal planning. And, of course, myriad government agencies at federal, state, and local levels have frequently been involved in civil suits as well as criminal prosecutions concerning higher education. Drug abuse problems have spawned legal issues, especially those concerning mandatory drug testing of employees or student athletes and compliance with “drug-free campus” laws. A technical college sought unsuccessfully to engage in mandatory, suspicionless drug testing of all its students before the policy was struck down by a federal appeals court. Federal government regulation of internet communications has led to new questions about liability for the spread of computer viruses, copyright infringement, transmission of sexually explicit materials, and defamation by cyberspeech. The rise of Massive Open Online Courses (MOOCS) and similar variations have sparked questions over student privacy and the use of Big Data in higher education. Outbreaks of racial, anti-Semitic, anti-Arab, homophobic, and political and ideological tensions on campuses have led to speech codes, academic bills of rights, and the eruption of a range of issues concerning student and faculty academic freedom. Initiatives to strengthen women's teams, prompted by alleged sex-based inequities in intercollegiate athletics, have led to suits by male athletes and coaches whose teams have been eliminated or downsized. Sexual harassment concerns have grown to include student peer harassment and harassment based on sexual orientation, as well as date rape and sexual assault. Hazing, alcohol use, and behavioral problems, implicating fraternities and men's athletic teams especially, continue as major issues.
The development of more relationships between research universities and private indu...

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