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Hold Off or Proceed?
The coronavirus pandemic is presenting barriers to conducting "prompt and equitable" investigations of sexual misconduct on college campuses, as required by law. College administrators weigh whether to continue investigations or put things on hold.

What Qualifies as Harassment?
A federal appeals court says universities must do everything in their power to stop further harassment of students who report it, and defines what behaviors qualify.

A Tougher Stand on Sexual Misconduct
University of Texas at Austin accepts recommendation to fire faculty members and staff found guilty of sexual misconduct and, in some cases, make their names public.

Education Dept. Penalizes University of Southern California
An investigation by the federal agency's Office for Civil Rights found the university failed to protect students from a serial sexual predator employed as a gynecologist at the campus health center.

‘The Rise of Women in Higher Education’
Author discusses theories about the progress made by women and the factors that hold them back.

Cheers and Fears
LGBTQ students at Brigham Young University are cautiously optimistic about a change in policy on displaying their sexual orientation.

STEM's Ongoing Sex-Difference Debate
It doesn't end -- even with two new commentaries on a contentious, corrected 2018 article saying more women with more freedoms choose non-STEM majors.

Hand-Delivered Hate or Free Speech Exercise?
The University of Louisville says administrators' hands are legally tied -- they cannot prevent a student from distributing anti-LGBTQ literature directly to LGBTQ students.
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