The Law of Higher Education, Student Version,
4th Edition
William A. Kaplin, Barbara A. Lee
Price: $90
Based on the fourth edition of The Law of
Higher Education—the indispensable guide
to law that bears on the provision of higher
education—this Student Edition provides an
up-to-date reference and guide for coursework
in higher education law. It also provides
a guide for programs that help prepare higher
education administrators for leadership roles.
This important reference is organized into
five main parts Perspectives and Foundations;
The College and Its Governing Board and Staff;
The College and Its Faculty; The College
and Its Students; and The College and the
Outside World. Each part includes the sections
of the full fourth edition that most relate
to student interests and are most suitable
for classroom instruction, for example:
The evolution and reach of higher education
law
The governance of higher education
Legal planning and dispute resolution
The interrelationships between law and policy
The college and its employees
Faculty employment and tenure
Academic freedom
Campus issues: student safety, racial and
sexual harassment, affirmative action, computer
networks, services for international students
Student misconduct
Freedom of speech, hate speech
Student rights, responsibilities, and activities
fees
Athletics and Title IX
Notice to Instructors.
Notice of Web Site and Periodic Supplements
for the Student Version.
Preface.
Crosswalk for the Student Version and The
Law of Higher Education, 4th Edition.
Acknowledgments.
The Authors.
General Introduction: The Study of Higher
Education Law.
A. The Universe of Higher Education Law.
B. The Governance of Higher Education.
C. Sources of Higher Education Law.
D. The Legal Relationships Within Institutions
of Higher Education.
E. The Law/Policy Distinction.
F. The U.S. Legal System as It Relates to
Higher Education Law.
PART ONE: PERSPECTIVES AND FOUNDATIONS.
1 Overview of Higher Education Law.
1.1 How Far the Law Reaches and How Loud
It Speaks.
1.2 Evolution of Higher Education Law.
1.3 The Governance of Higher Education.
1.3.1 Basic concepts and distinctions.
1.3.2 Internal governance.
1.3.3 External governance.
1.4 Sources of Higher Education Law.
1.4.1 Overview.
1.4.2 External sources of law.
1.4.2.1 Federal and state constitutions.
1.4.2.2 Statutes.
1.4.2.3 Administrative rules and regulations.
1.4.2.4 State common law.
1.4.2.5 Foreign and international law.
1.4.3 Internal sources of law.
1.4.3.1 Institutional rules and regulations.
1.4.3.2 Institutional contracts.
1.4.3.3 Academic custom and usage.
1.4.4 The role of case law.
1.4.5 Researching case law.
1.5 The Public-Private Dichotomy.
1.5.1 Overview.
1.5.2 The state action doctrine.
1.5.3 Other bases for legal rights in private
institutions.
1.6 Religion and the Public-Private Dichotomy.
1.6.1 Overview.
1.6.2 Religious autonomy rights of religious
institutions.
1.6.3 Government support for religious institutions.
1.6.4 Religious autonomy rights of individuals
in public postsecondary institutions.
1.7 The Relationship Between Law and Policy.
2 Legal Planning and Dispute Resolution.
2.1 Legal Liability.
2.1.1 Overview.
2.1.2 Types of liability.
2.1.3 Agency law.
2.1.4 Enforcement mechanisms.
2.1.5 Remedies for legal violations.
2.1.6 Avoiding legal liability.
2.1.7 Treatment law and preventive law.
2.2 Litigation in the Courts.
2.2.1 Overview.
2.2.2 Judicial (academic) deference.
2.2.3 Managing litigation and the threat
of litigation.
2.3 Alternate Dispute Resolution.
2.3.1 Overview.
2.3.2 Types of ADR.
2.3.3 Applications to colleges and universities.
PART TWO: THE COLLEGE AND ITS GOVERNING BOARD
AND STAFF.
3 The College’s Authority and Liability.
3.1 The Question of Authority.
3.1.1 Overview.
3.1.2 Trustee authority.
3.2 Institutional Tort Liability.
3.2.1 Overview.
3.2.2 Negligence.
3.2.2.1 Premises liability.
3.2.2.2 Liability for injuries related to
on-campus instruction.
3.2.2.3 Liability for injuries in off-campus
courses.
3.2.2.4 Liability for cocurricular and social
activities.
3.2.2.5 Student suicide.
3.2.2.6 Liability for injuries related to
outreach programs.
3.2.3 Educational malpractice.
3.3 Institutional Contract Liability.
3.4 Institutional Liability for Violating
Federal Constitutional Rights (Section 1983
Liability).
4 The College and Its Employees.
4.1 Overview of Employment Relationships.
4.2 Employment Contracts.
4.2.1 Defining the contract.
4.2.2 The at-will doctrine.
4.3 Collective Bargaining.
4.3.1 Overview.
4.3.2 The public-private dichotomy in collective
bargaining.
4.3.3 Collective bargaining and antidiscrimination
laws.
4.4 Personal Liability of Employees.
4.4.1 Overview.
4.4.2 Tort liability.
4.4.2.1 Overview.
4.4.2.2 Negligence.
4.4.3 Contract liability.
4.4.4 Constitutional liability (personal
liability under Section 1983).
4.4.4.1 Qualified immunity.
4.4.4.2 Issues on the merits: State-created
dangers.
4.5 Employment Discrimination.
4.5.1 Overview: The interplay of statutes,
regulations, and constitutional protections.
4.5.2 Sources of law.
4.5.2.1 Title VII.
4.5.2.2 Equal Pay Act.
4.5.2.3 Title IX.
4.5.2.4 Section 1981.
4.5.2.5 Americans With Disabilities Act and
Rehabilitation Act of 1973.
4.5.2.6 Age Discrimination in Employment
Act.
4.5.2.7 Constitutional prohibitions against
employment discrimination.
4.5.2.8 Executive Orders 11246 and 11375.
4.5.2.9 State law prohibitions on sexual
orientation discrimination.
4.6 Affirmative Action.
4.6.1 Overview.
4.6.2 Affirmative action under Title VII.
4.6.3 Affirmative action under the equal
protection clause.
4.7 Application of Nondiscrimination Laws
to Religious Institutions.
PART THREE: THE COLLEGE AND ITS FACULTY.
5 Special Issues in Faculty Employment.
5.1 Overview.
5.2 Faculty Contracts.
5.2.1 Overview.
5.2.2 Academic custom and usage.
5.2.3 Part-time faculty.
5.2.4 Contracts in religious institutions.
5.3 Faculty Collective Bargaining.
5.4 Application of Nondiscrimination Laws
to Faculty Employment Decisions.
5.4.1 Overview.
5.4.2 Judicial deference and remedies for
tenure denial.
5.5 Affirmative Action in Faculty Employment
Decisions.
5.6 Standards and Criteria for Faculty Personnel
Decisions.
5.6.1 General principles.
5.6.2 Terminations of tenure for cause.
5.7 Procedures for Faculty Employment Decisions.
5.7.1 General principles.
5.7.2 The public faculty member's right to
constitutional due process.
5.7.2.1 Nonrenewal of contracts.
5.7.2.2 Denial of tenure.
5.7.2.3 Termination of tenure.
5.7.3 The private faculty member’s procedural
rights.
6 Faculty Academic Freedom and Freedom of
Expression.
6.1 General Concepts and Principles.
6.1.1 Faculty freedom of expression in general.
6.1.2 Academic freedom: Basic concepts and
distinctions.
6.1.3 Professional versus legal concepts
of academic freedom.
6.1.4 The foundational constitutional law
cases.
6.1.5 External versus internal restraints
on academic freedom.
6.1.6 “Institutional” academic freedom.
6.2 Academic Freedom in Teaching.
6.2.1 In general.
6.2.2 The classroom.
6.2.3 Grading.
6.2.4 Private institutions.
6.3 Academic Freedom in Research and Publication.
6.4 Academic Freedom in Religious Colleges
and Universities.
PART FOUR: THE COLLEGE AND ITS STUDENTS.
7 The Student/Institution Relationship.
7.1 The Legal Status of Students.
7.1.1 Overview.
7.1.2 The age of majority.
7.1.3 The contractual rights of students.
7.1.4 Student academic freedom.
7.1.5 Students’ legal relationships with
other students.
7.2 Admissions.
7.2.1 Basic legal requirements.
7.2.2 Arbitrariness.
7.2.3 The contract theory.
7.2.4 The principle of nondiscrimination.
7.2.4.1 Race.
7.2.4.2 Sex.
7.2.4.3 Disability.
7.2.4.4 Immigration status.
7.2.5 Affirmative action programs.
7.2.6 Readmission.
7.3 Financial Aid.
7.3.1 General principles.
7.3.2 Federal programs.
7.3.3 Nondiscrimination.
7.3.4 Affirmative action in financial aid
programs.
7.4 Student Housing.
7.4.1 Housing regulations.
7.4.2 Searches and seizures.
7.5 Campus Computer Networks.
7.5.1 Freedom of speech.
7.5.2 Liability issues.
7.6 Campus Security.
7.6.1 Security officers.
7.6.2 Protecting students against violent
crime.
7.6.3 Federal statues and campus security.
7.7 Other Support Services.
7.7.1 Overview.
7.7.2 Services for students with disabilities.
7.7.3 Services for international students.
8 Rights and Responsibilities of Individual
Students.
8.1 Disciplinary and Grievance Systems.
8.1.1 Overview.
8.1.2 Establishment of systems.
8.1.3 Codes of student conduct.
8.1.4 Judicial systems.
8.2 Disciplinary Rules and Regulations.
8.2.1 Overview.
8.2.2 Public institutions.
8.2.3 Private institutions.
8.2.4 Disciplining students with psychiatric
illnesses.
8.3 Grades, Credits, and Degrees.
8.3.1 Overview.
8.3.2 Awarding of grades and degrees.
8.3.3 Sexual harassment of students by faculty
members.
8.3.4 Evaluating students with disabilities.
8.3.4.1 Overview.
8.3.4.2 The concept of disability.
8.3.4.3 Notice and documentation of disabilities.
8.3.4.4 Requests for programmatic or instructional
accommodations.
8.4 Procedures for Suspension, Dismissal,
and Other Sanctions.
8.4.1 Overview.
8.4.2 Public institutions: Disciplinary sanctions.
8.4.2.1 Notice.
8.4.2.2 Hearing.
8.4.3 Public institutions: Academic sanctions.
8.4.4 Private institutions.
8.5 Student Protests and Freedom of Speech.
8.5.1 Student free speech in general.
8.5.2 The “public forum” concept.
8.5.3 Regulation of student protest.
8.5.4 Prior approval of protest activities.
8.5.5 Posters and leaflets.
8.5.6 Protests in the classroom.
8.6 Speech Codes and the Problem of Hate
Speech.
8.6.1 Hate speech and the campus.
8.6.2. The case law on hate speech and speech
codes.
8.6.3. Guidelines for dealing with hate speech
on campus.
8.7 Student Files and Records.
8.7.1 Family Educational Rights and Privacy
Act (FERPA).
8.7.2 State law.
9 Rights and Responsibilities of Student
Organizations and Their Members.
9.1 Student Organizations.
9.1.1 The right to organize.
9.1.2 The right not to join, or associate,
or subsidize.
9.1.3 Mandatory student activities fees.
9.1.4 Principle of nondiscrimination.
9.1.5 Religious activities.
9.2 Fraternities and Sororities.
9.2.1 Overview.
9.2.2 Institutional recognition and regulation
of fraternal organizations.
9.2.3 Institutional liability for the acts
of fraternal organizations.
9.3 The Student Press.
9.3.1 General principles.
9.3.2 Mandatory student fee allocations to
student publications.
9.3.3 Permissible scope of institutional
regulation.
9.3.4 Obscenity.
9.3.5 Libel.
9.3.6 Obscenity and libel in private institutions.
9.4 Athletics Teams and Clubs.
9.4.1 General principles.
9.4.2 Athletes’ due process rights.
9.4.3 Athletes’ freedom of speech.
9.4.4 Pertinent statutory law.
9.4.5 Athletic scholarships.
9.4.6 Sex discrimination.
9.4.7 Discrimination on the basis of disability.
9.4.8 Drug testing.
9.4.9 Tort liability for athletic injuries.
PART FIVE: THE COLLEGE AND THE OUTSIDE WORLD.
10 The College and Government.
10.1 Local Government Regulation.
10.1.1 Overview of local government regulation.
10.1.2 Trespass statutes and ordinances,
and related campus regulations.
10.2 State Government Regulation.
10.2.1 Overview.
10.2.2 State provision of public postsecondary
education.
10.2.3 State chartering and licensure of
private postsecondary institutions.
10.3 Federal Government Regulation.
10.3.1 Overview of federal constitutional
powers over education.
10.3.2 Overview of federal regulation of
postsecondary education.
10.3.3 Regulation of intellectual property.
10.3.3.1. Copyright law.
10.4 Federal Aid-to-Education Programs.
10.4.1 Functions and history.
10.4.2 Legal structure of federal aid programs.
10.5 Civil Rights Compliance.
10.5.1 General considerations.
10.5.2 Title VI.
10.5.3 Title IX.
10.5.4 Section 504.
10.5.5 Coverage of unintentional discriminatory
acts.
11 The College and External Private Entities.
11.1 Education Associations.
11.1.1 Overview of the education associations.
11.1.2 Accrediting agencies.
11.1.3 Athletic associations and conferences.
11.2 Business Partners.
11.2.1 Research collaboration.
11.2.2 The research agreement.
Appendices.
A. Constitution of the United States of America:
Provisions of Particular Interest to Postsecondary
Education.
B. The American Court System.
C. Reading and Analyzing Court Opinions.
D. Glossary of Legal Terms.
Bibliography.
Statute Index.
Case Index.
Subject Index.
Return to Educator"s Reviews