HAZINGis defined as any intentional, knowing, or reckless act, occurring on or off the campus of an educational institution, by one person alone or acting with others, directed against an individual that endangers the mental or physical health or safety of a student for the purpose of pledging, being initiated into, affiliating with, holding office in, or maintaining membership in any organization whose members are or include students at an educational institution, including but is not limited to the following:
This policy provides that “hazing” includes but is not limited to any of the following that is associated with pledging, being initiated into, affiliating with, participating in, holding office in, or maintaining membership in any organization:
(1) Physical brutality, such as whipping, beating, striking, branding, burning, shoving electronic shocking, blindfolding, paddle swats, bondage or restriction, or placing of a harmful substance on the body, or similar activity.
(2) Physical activity, such as sleep, food or drink deprivation, exposure to the elements, confinement in a small space, calisthenics, forced exercise, jogs or runs that subjects the other person to an unreasonable risk of harm or that adversely affects the physical health or safety of the individual or causes severe emotional distress.
(3) Activity involving the consumption of food, liquid, or any other substance, including but not limited to an alcoholic beverage or drug, that subjects the individual to an unreasonable risk of harm or that adversely affects the physical health or safety of the individual or causes severe emotional distress.
(4) Requiring or coercing someone to perform public stunts, buffoonery, personal or group servitude (washing cars, running errands, cleaning), wearing apparel that is uncomfortable, conspicuous, or not normally in good taste.
(5) Creating, inflicting, or requiring any activity that detracts from adequate study or class time or productive work, or any activity that is not consistent with the academic mission of the University of Louisiana Monroe. For example, any activity or situation that keeps an individual from less than six uninterrupted hours of sleep.
(6) Bullying, degrading, humiliating, ridiculing, or harassing an individual or group through words or deeds: line-ups or interrogations; name calling; threats or lies.
(7) Activity that induces, causes, or requires an individual to break a university, local, state or federal law or policy. The law provides exceptions for normal physical activity associated with athletics, physical education, military training, or similar programs.
(8) Activity that includes nudity.
Organization: is a fraternity, sorority, association, corporation, order, society, corps,cooperative, club, service group, social group, band, spirit group, athletic team, or similargroup whose members are primarily students at, or former students of, a post-secondaryeducation institution, including the national or parent organization of which any of theunderlying entities provided for in this definition is a sanctioned or recognized member atthe time of the hazing.
Pledging: is any action or activity related to becoming a member of an organization,including recruitment and rushing.
Appropriate authority includes:
Reckless behavior: is an activity or behavior in which a reasonable person knew orreasonably should have known that the activity or behavior may result in injury to another,including but not limited to excessive consumption of alcohol, binge drinking, drag racing,consumption of any controlled dangerous substance, acts of hazing, or other similaractivity.
Serious bodily injury: is bodily injury that involves unconsciousness, extreme physicalpain, or protracted and obvious disfigurement, or protracted loss or impairment of thefunction of a bodily member, organ, or mental faculty, death, or a substantial risk of death.
- More than half of college students involved in clubs, teams, and organizations experience hazing.
- 82% of deaths from hazing involve alcohol.
- Individuals CANNOT consent to being hazed.
- Just because a majority of the members of an organization are not involved in a hazing incident does not mean the organization is not responsible.
- Hazing is not just associated with athletes and Greek-lettered organizations. It occurs across a wide spectrum of organizations.
Student Group |
Percent |
Varsity Athletes |
74% |
Social Fraternity or Sorority |
73% |
Club Sport |
64% |
Performing Arts Organization |
56% |
Service Fraternity or Sorority |
50% |
Intramural Team |
49% |
Recreation Club |
42% |
*Other |
30% |
Academic Club |
28% |
Honor Society |
20% |
Allan & Madden, 2008, hazingstudy.org
*Other includes religiously-affiliated organizations, culture clubs and organizations, and student government