UPDATED: December 30, 2014, at 2:36 p.m.
\r\nColleges and universities nationwide grappled with how best to address campus sexual assault this year as the White House put a spotlight on the issue and the federal government investigated dozens of schools’ Title IX compliance. Harvard was no exception.
\r\nControversy over Harvard’s handling of sexual assault first came to a head in late March, when a first-person, anonymous op-ed published by The Crimson’s editorial board criticized the College’s sexual assault policy and prompted outcry among student leaders. Just days later, news broke that two undergraduates had filed a complaint with the U.S. Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights, alleging that the College’s sexual assault policies violated Title IX; the office later launched an investigation into the issue that remains ongoing.\xa0
\r\nAmidst the controversy, Harvard administrators took several steps to address the issue. In early April, University President Drew G. Faust convened a task force to focus on prevention; that group soon recommended increasing funding for the Office of Sexual Assault Prevention and Response, among other points. And notably, administrators unveiled in July a new University-wide policy that rehauled Harvard’s approach to handling cases of alleged sexual harassment. The procedures created a new office responsible for investigating allegations of sexual misconduct against students from all of Harvard’s schools—an office that, months after its creation, remained understaffed.
\r\nThe new policy prompted criticism from both student activists who decried its lack of an explicit affirmative consent clause and professors at the Law School who argued that it is biased against the accused.
\r\nIn late December, OCR determined that Harvard Law School\'s "current and prior" sexual harassment policies violated Title IX following a\xa0years-long probe.
\r\nFor a visual break down of this story and others, watch this video.
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