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Slap on the Wrist?

Northwestern acknowledged a professor sexually harassed a student, but didn't fire him. Where is the line drawn?
Opinion

Book 'Em?

Spending state funds on prison education is both just and cost-effective, and doesn't take a penny away from students who have never been behind bars, write Glenn Altschuler and Mary Fainsod Katzenstein.

Prison U.

New York's governor hopes a college education can help cut prison costs. Critics think the money is going to the wrong people.

Abuse Ignored

Outside report finds that UConn officials for years didn't respond to allegations that a music professor abused children and engaged in unprofessional conduct with university students.

Standards of Evidence

An Education Department proposal on how colleges need to conduct campus disciplinary hearings involving sexual assault is sparking renewed debate over the standards of evidence in those proceedings.

Classrooms, Courts or Neither?

Students, administrators and lawyers argue over whether and how colleges should adjudicate campus assault cases at U. of Virginia conference on sexual misconduct.

Straight Talk on Sexual Violence

Presidents whose campuses have been shaken by sexual misconduct speak about the issue with unusual candor at a University of Virginia "dialogue."

Cutting Ties

The study abroad provider Living Routes will close its doors after the University of Massachusetts at Amherst, citing health and safety concerns, suspends its affiliation agreement with the organization.