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Campus Sexual Assault
Constitutional Rights and Fundamental Fairness

Demonstrates how colleges routinely deny students fair hearings in sexual assault cases and define sexual assault in an unconstitutionally broad manner.

Evan Gerstmann (Author)

9781108497923, Cambridge University Press

Hardback, published 13 December 2018

244 pages
23.5 x 15.7 x 1.8 cm, 0.47 kg

'This book could not be more timely and important. The point that due process protects victims as well as perpetrators is brilliantly argued. And the author suggests balanced, constructive reforms that would benefit the entire university community.' Jonathan Rauch, Brookings Institution, Washington, DC

Sexual assault on college campuses has drawn tremendous public attention and colleges are under great pressure to respond. In many cases, the result has been a system of sexual assault tribunals that violates the rights of alleged assailants and assault survivors. Gerstmann shows how colleges are often punishing students as sex offenders without a fair hearing and are defining sexual offenses in an unconstitutionally broad manner. Using unbiased and accessible language, this book avoids easy answers and asks: how are colleges failing to assess accusations in a fair manner? Why are 'affirmative consent' laws unconstitutional? How can we do a better job preventing sexual assault? The author argues that colleges are too often making poor choices in terms of how they respond to allegations of sexual assault and, in doing so, they are depriving students of due process, while failing to protect victims of assault.

Introduction
Part I. The Need for Due Process: 1. The due process deficit and the importance of college adjudication
2. Due process and the Constitution
3. Due process and private universities
Part II. What Process is Due?: 4. Due process prior to the hearing
5. Due process during and after the hearing
Part III. Substance and Solutions: 6. Sexual assault and affirmative consent
7. Affirmative consent and the Constitution
8. The empirical claims for affirmative consent
9. Moving forward.

Subject Areas: Education & the law [LNTD], Constitutional & administrative law [LND], Constitution: government & the state [JPHC], Politics & government [JP], Educational strategies & policy [JNF], Education [JN]

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