
Contents
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Fraternities: accidents, excess and accountability Fraternities: accidents, excess and accountability
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Flanagan (2014) on fraternities Flanagan (2014) on fraternities
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Wesleyan and President Roth Wesleyan and President Roth
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Reform and resistance Reform and resistance
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Wade and fraternity abolition Wade and fraternity abolition
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Recidivism Recidivism
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Risk, excess and conformity Risk, excess and conformity
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4 Excess, Reform and Resistance
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Published:October 2022
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Abstract
A pivotal issue is the role of the college-university in the regulation of student societies through private justice and in the manner they regulate and enforce internal rules, regulations and laws. For who is accountable? The focus in this chapter is especially on US fraternities, drawing on an insightful and disturbing article by Flanagan (2014). The US has around 2,600 accredited colleges and universities and if they receive federal aid then they have to comply with federal guidelines. But with so many institutions, public and private, and within 50 states – each having its own legislation and with varying compliance cultures – this means that compliance with federal guidelines is patchy if not resistant. Moreover, US fraternities typically have a complex institutional structure, with national organizations possessing considerable financial means, legal support and political influence. This structure, with an assertive and well-resourced Political Action Committee (PAC) at the national level, is not true in the other societies dealt with here.
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