Table of Contents
From Green to Red: A Cautionary Tale
Iâm sad to report that one of our very few âgreen lightâ institutions (colleges and universities receive a âgreen lightâ rating on FIREâs Spotlight if they maintain no written policies that infringe on constitutionally protected expression) was downgraded to a âred lightâ yesterday when I updated its policies for the 2006-2007 academic year.
The University of Iowa was one of only a handful of schools to be rated a âgreen light.â It earned this rating because its policies were consistent with the First Amendment. Its sexual harassment policy, for example, provides that:
For purposes of this policy, âsexual harassmentâ means persistent, repetitive, or egregious conduct directed at a specific individual or group of individuals that a reasonable person would interpret, in the full context in which the conduct occurs, as harassment of a sexual nature, when: [...] Such conduct has the purpose or effect of unreasonably interfering with work or educational performance, or of creating an intimidating or hostile environment for employment, education, on-campus living, or participation in a University activity.
This definition closely mirrors what the Department of Education and the U.S. Supreme Court have defined as unlawful harassment. Unfortunately, however, the University of Iowa now maintains a separate website about sexual harassment that provides a definition very different from that in the policy. At sexualharassment.uiowa.edu, students are told that sexual harassment âoccurs when somebody says or does something sexually related that you donât want them to say or do, regardless of who it is.â Examples of sexual harassment include people â[t]alking about their sexual experiencesâ and â[t]elling sexual jokes, innuendoes, and stories, or comments (about your clothes or body, or someone elseâs).â Unlike the first definition, this definition prohibits a great deal of constitutionally protected speech, since a single unwanted sexual joke or comment will rarely, if ever, constitute true harassment.
So what is the real definition of sexual harassment at the University of Iowa? Is it only âpersistent, repetitive, or egregious conductâ that âunreasonably interfer[es]â with someoneâs education? Or is it merely âwhen somebody says or does something sexually related that you donât want them to say or doâ? These are two very different things, and students at the University of Iowa are now forced to guessâunder threat of punishmentâwhich definition the university will choose to enforce. Most students will understandably take the safe route, avoiding any âsexual jokesâ or âcommentsâ that might violate the broader definition.
If the University of Iowa wants its green light back, it needs to get rid of this new definition immediately and inform students that they can only be punished for engaging in actual harassment of the sort described in the universityâs original definition.
Recent Articles
Get the latest free speech news and analysis from ĂÛÖÏăÌÒ.

FIREstatement on UT-Dallas student newspaper distribution

VICTORY! University of North Texas system lifts drag âpauseâ after ĂÛÖÏăÌÒ/ACLU of TX letter

How sure are you?
