Two consultants to the Department of Education will participate this weekend in two afternoon-long roundtable discussions with women who have suffered sexual harassment in academic situations.
The discussions, coordinated by the Radcliffe Union of Students (RUS) and Marlyn M. Lewis, assistant dean of the College, will kick off a federally funded national campaign against harassment of women. The project this spring will include ten regional workshops--the Northeast workshop will probably be held at Harvard--and the production of a leaflet on sexual harassment, which will be distributed nationwide, Sharon J. Orr '83, an RUS member, said this week.
Treating sexual harassment as an issue covered by Title IX, which forbids sex discrimination in education, the soon-to-be-defunct Department of Education funded the project "with the assumption that if not now, never," Orr said.
The two female consultants, who work with the Washington, D.C., consulting firm L-Miranda, will meet Saturday and Sunday afternoon with women--or men--who feel they have suffered harassment, which Orr defined as sexual advances accompanied by power or "the force of a working relationship."
The "brainstorming on a first-name basis" should provide ideas for the spring workshop series, Orr said, adding that one of the objectives is to reevaluate established grievance procedures for sexually harassed students at various universities, including Harvard.
Read more in News
Craigie Tenants Near Settlement With HarvardRecommended Articles
-
Extension School To Host WorkshopEmployees of the Extension School will take part in a sexual harassment sensitivity, workshop next Wednesday, Dean of Continuing Education
-
RUS Seeks Sexual Harassment PolicyThe Radcliffe Union of Students (RUS) yesterday called upon the Faculty to explicitly define sexual harassment and to publicize a
-
Council Discusses Harassment IssueFollowing two full meetings devoted solely to the election of its officers, the Undergraduate Council last night tackled its first
-
New Policy Tackled Harassment at HarvardWhen the class of 1983 first arrived on campus, Harvard’s new sexual harassment policy had yet to be implemented. “No
-
The Professors' Misplaced CriticismsThe authors of the letter are correct in saying that Harvard University must “stand up for principle.” But the principle it must stand for is justice for the victims of sexual harassment and assault.
-
Law School Found in Violation of Title IX after Years-Long ProbeIn its investigation into the Law School’s Title IX compliance, the Department of Education's Office for Civil Rights found that the Law School “failed to comply with Title IX's requirements for prompt and equitable response” to complaints of alleged sexual harassment and sexual assault.