Welcome to DU! The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards. Join the community: Create a free account Support DU (and get rid of ads!): Become a Star Member Latest Breaking News General Discussion The DU Lounge All Forums Issue Forums Culture Forums Alliance Forums Region Forums Support Forums Help & Search
 

Purveyor

(29,876 posts)
Mon Aug 1, 2016, 12:43 AM Aug 2016

Michigan State Opens a Women-Only Study Space to Men After a Title IX Complaint


In 1925, Michigan State University established a women’s lounge. The room, according to a sign that hangs beside its entrance, “has long been a quiet, secure place for women. It is a safe refuge and serves as a haven for reflection, study, and solitude.” After reading what “a great space” the room was for women, Mark Perry—an economics professor at the University of Michigan’s Flint campus who is currently a scholar at the conservative American Enterprise Institute—wondered if it violated the law.

Perry thought that under Title IX it couldn’t possibly be legal to ban men from a taxpayer-funded study area. After his interactions with the school failed to lead to a policy change, he complained to the Michigan Department of Civil Rights. It was rejected because Perry hadn’t personally endured discrimination, but after the Daily Caller, a conservative news site, featured his complaint, and after he wrote about the issue, the school opened up the room to men.

University spokesman Jason Cody said that last spring MSU made plans to make the lounge a gender-neutral space. Male students had protested, and the school was concerned that the women-only space alienated transgender students, so MSU “decided on an open lounge for all students, rather than adding a male-only lounge.”

Although Perry might technically be right, this is a troubling use of Title IX. According to a 2015 MSU survey, 1 in 4 college women at the university has experienced sexual assault. Title IX was created to support gender equality on campuses, but here someone is invoking it to remove access to a safe space on campus for 51.6 percent of the student body. If the existence of this room helped women—who are disproportionately victims of sexual assault in college—feel a little safer, it is disappointing to see a law meant to help them be used to take away a facility that was beneficial. Perry might have a legal point, but he is wrong from a moral point of view.

Ultimately, though, the law is king. A public university really shouldn’t be in the business of segregating its students based on sex or gender. However, there is nothing to stop women at MSU from banding together to reserve rooms to study in, creating their own communities and groups to provide whatever benefit the lounge used to provide. Will it be as easy as going to a room whenever they want? Absolutely not, but it could be a step in the right direction. What’s more, the effort might well help policymakers realize that there is a large population of students whose needs and safety are not being served by current school policy.

more...

http://www.slate.com/blogs/xx_factor/2016/07/29/msu_opens_a_women_only_lounge_to_men_after_a_title_ix_complaint.html
1 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight: NoneDon't highlight anything 5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
Michigan State Opens a Women-Only Study Space to Men After a Title IX Complaint (Original Post) Purveyor Aug 2016 OP
Reminds me of how GNU uses Copyright laws against themselves to create Copyleft scscholar Aug 2016 #1
 

scscholar

(2,902 posts)
1. Reminds me of how GNU uses Copyright laws against themselves to create Copyleft
Mon Aug 1, 2016, 01:23 AM
Aug 2016

It's a subversion of the law.

Latest Discussions»General Discussion»Michigan State Opens a Wo...