Connect with us

Education

How the federal government is responding to campus antisemitism and Islamophobia

[ad_1]

This audio is auto-generated. Please let us know if you have feedback.

Ever since Hamas, labeled a terrorist group by the U.S. government, attacked Israel in early October, colleges nationwide have struggled to regulate protests and combat rising antisemitic and Islamophobic acts.

Institutions of all sorts have seen turmoil — from the small private nonprofit Cooper Union, where Jewish students sheltered in a library while pro-Palestinian protesters banged on the building’s doors, to the prominent New York University, where students alleged in a lawsuit last week that the college allowed campus antisemitism to flourish. 

Meanwhile, at Vanderbilt University, in Tennessee, Muslim students have reportedly been called terrorists.

The U.S. Department of Education is now investigating a handful of colleges, including Cooper Union. 

The Biden administration has mobilized federal agencies, particularly the Education Department, to try to tamp down on prejudicial acts. Congressional representatives have also weighed in, with some House Republicans recently blaming colleges’ diversity programming on the uptick in antisemitism.

Below, we summarize some of the executive wing’s and lawmakers’ efforts.

The Education Department investigates six colleges, one K-12 school district

The Education Department said Thursday it had begun investigating six colleges and one K-12 school district over allegations of antisemitism and Islamophobia on their campuses. Three of the colleges under scrutiny are Ivy League institutions. 

The institutions are:

  • Lafayette College, in Pennsylvania.
  • Cornell University, in New York.
  • Columbia University, in New York. 
  • Wellesley College, in Massachusetts. 
  • University of Pennsylvania.
  • Cooper Union, in New York. 

“These investigations underscore how seriously the Biden-Harris Administration, including the U.S. Department of Education, takes our responsibility to protect students from hatred and discrimination,” Education Secretary Miguel Cardona said in a statement. 

In early November, the Education Department published guidance reminding K-12 schools and colleges that they must combat prejudice against Jewish, Israeli, Muslim, Arab and Palestinian students under Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964.

Colleges found not to be in compliance could lose access to federal aid. 

The letter, signed by Assistant Secretary for Civil Rights Catherine Lhamon, does not say how colleges should respond to specific incidents. 

But it does detail broader concepts, like how harassment can be either verbal or physical. The action also doesn’t need to be directed at a particular person to be considered harassment. Colleges need to respond to any behavior “that creates a hostile environment,” the letter reads.

The missive does define a hostile environment as any “unwelcome conduct based on shared ancestry or ethnic characteristics” that is so severe and pervasive that it interferes or stops students from continuing their education.

However, it’s still up to colleges to determine what constitutes harassment versus protected political speech. 

The letter also links to an Education Department fact sheet from January that further delves into Title VI obligations. 

A cross-agency push

In mid-November, the Education Department pushed out more resources for K-12 schools and colleges. The agency framed it as an extension of a full-court press strategy to mitigate antisemitism nationwide, which the Biden administration had announced in May.

At the time, the White House said more than two dozen federal agencies would take “over 100 meaningful actions” to counter antisemitic acts. 

New initiatives unveiled this month include guidance on addressing campus discrimination from Education Department-funded technical centers, like the National Center on Safe Supportive Learning Environments. The center conducts campus climate surveys and gives advice on improving institutional safety.

Around the same time, the FBI published a “hate crime threat response guide” that illustrates how to respond to different types of threats, whether that be verbal, electronic or physical.

A White House official also told CNN last month that the Justice and Homeland Security departments “have disseminated public safety information to and hosted multiple calls with campus law enforcement, as well as state, local, tribal and territorial officials to address the threat environment and share information about available resources.”

[ad_2]

Jeremy Bauer-Wolf

Source link