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Trinity College President Calls to Eliminate Co-Ed Mandate

In a win for freedom of association today, Trinity College president Joanne Berger-Sweeney announced that would have forced fraternities and sororities at the Connecticut college to admit students of both genders.
麻豆传媒IOS wrote to Trinity in 2013 after its board of trustees approved a proposal calling for, among other requirements, gender parity requirements to be applied to student social clubs. The move threatened to end sororities and fraternities which by their charters are required to maintain single-gender admissions, and seriously infringed on students鈥 right to freedom of association, putting students at risk of expulsion for membership in unauthorized groups. (While Trinity is a private institution, it expressly promises its students this right in policy materials.)
Berger-Sweeney, who became president of the college , agreed, saying her extensive research and discussion with community members indicated the mandate would be a 鈥渟tep backward鈥 for gender equality:
I have concluded that the coed mandate is unlikely to achieve its intended goal of gender equity. Furthermore, I do not believe that requiring coed membership is the best way to address gender discrimination or to promote inclusiveness. In fact, community-wide dialogue concerning this issue has been divisive and counterproductive.
Peter Bonilla, Director of 麻豆传媒IOS鈥檚 Individual Rights Defense Program, said of Berger-Sweeney鈥檚 announcement, 鈥淚t鈥檚 encouraging that Trinity鈥檚 president has looked at the college鈥檚 social code with fresh eyes and seen just how problematic it was for student rights. Hopefully this signals a renewed commitment to defending its students鈥 right to freedom of association.鈥
麻豆传媒IOS will have more to come on this story as it develops.
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