Close X
Tuesday, September 24, 2024
ADVT 
International

Sexist 'Lad' Culture Against Female Students At British Campuses

Darpan News Desk IANS, 14 Sep, 2015 10:15 AM
    If you are a female student from India and aspires to join a British university, brace yourself for the “lad culture” first. Defined as “a subset of student life that promotes one particular masculinity,” the “lad culture” - a local euphemism like 'eve teasing' in India for sexual harassment - has made campus life difficult for female students, especially freshers, who are reporting more and more cases of groping, sexual persecution and violence.
     
    A latest survey by the British National Union of Students (NUS) found that British universities have “failed to tackle lad culture,” with only one in 10 institutions including relevant policies in the freshers’ welcome pack.
     
    “The findings follow reports in the last few months of a resurgence in 'lad culture' on campus following a flurry of scandals on campus and which led to the head of an Oxford University college to warn of an “unprecedented” scale of groping and sexual harassment,” the Guardian reported, citing the NUS findings.
     
    In an another NUS survey of over 2,000 men and women students, almost one third of respondents said they endure unwanted sexual comments about their body (37 percent of women).
     
    Two thirds of respondents said they have seen students put up with unwanted sexual comments, with just under one third bearing witness to verbal harassment based on a student’s gender.
     
    “Nearly 75 percent of students are aware of online communities such as ‘Unilad’ and ‘Lad Bible’ with almost two thirds of women students (63 per cent) agreeing that these contribute to an unfair representation of women,” the NUS survey stated.
     
    The report also found that “many” universities first ask victims to make efforts to solve matters “informally”.
     
    A Guardian investigation in May had found that fewer than half of Britain’s top universities were monitoring the extent of the problem, while one in six did not have specific guidelines for students on how to report such allegations. 
     
    The growing “lad culture” has finally forced the British government to act.
     
    Last week, the government finally decided to set up a taskforce to curb the sexist “lad culture” on the campus.
     
    In a letter written to Universities UK which represents the country's vice chancellors, Business Secretary Sajid Javid ordered to form a taskforce that will wipe out “lad culture” at British campuses, the Independent reported.
     
     
    “This taskforce will ensure that universities have a plan to stamp out violence against women and provide a safe environment for all their students,” Javid wrote.
     
    The NUS defines “lad culture” as one expressed through hard drinking and hard bantering; one that normalises sexual harassment; and one that exaggerates this masculinity in the face of a threat to it.
     
    “We do not tolerate this behaviour in any part of society, and I’m not prepared to let it take place on university campuses unchecked,” Javid wrote in the letter to Universities UK.
     
    “I have got three daughters and one of them is just starting her A-levels so she’s just starting to think about what she might do, and university is one of the options," Javid told the Sunday Times. 
     
    "I just hate to think that she is sitting there thinking, ‘I don’t want to go to university because I might be assaulted,'” he added.
     
    The taskforce is expected to be convened in the autumn and work over a full year. Once in action, the new taskforce will look at how complaints can be better handled and work with crime prevention officers to tackle the problem.
     
    “This taskforce will make sure that the universities are doing all they can to meet their legal obligations and, will see where they can go further,” Universities Minister Jo Johnson was quoted as saying.
     
    The NUS said it is happy to see the government take the issue of “lad culture” seriously.
     
    “We need the education community to get behind the work that NUS and students’ unions are doing and support students in challenging lad culture, sexual harassment, and violence on campuses,” NUS women’s officer Susuana Amoah was quoted as saying in the Independent report.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Three Indian American Youths Shortlisted For White House Fellowship

    Three Indian American Youths Shortlisted For White House Fellowship
    Three Indian Americans are among the national finalists for the 2015-16 White House Fellowship that offers exceptional Americans first-hand experience working at the highest levels of the federal government.

    Three Indian American Youths Shortlisted For White House Fellowship

    Infosys, TCS Under US Scrutiny Over Visas For IT Workers

    Infosys, TCS Under US Scrutiny Over Visas For IT Workers
    The US has opened an investigation into two top Indian IT companies -- Tata Consultancy Services and Infosys -- for possible violations of rules for H-1B visas for foreign technology workers, according to a media report.

    Infosys, TCS Under US Scrutiny Over Visas For IT Workers

    America's Doctor' Vivek Murthy Gets Pride Of Community Award

    America's Doctor' Vivek Murthy Gets Pride Of Community Award
    Dr Vivek Murthy, the Indian-American US surgeon general, also known as "America's Doctor", has been presented with the Pride of the Community Award by the Hindu American Foundation, a Hindu advocacy group.

    America's Doctor' Vivek Murthy Gets Pride Of Community Award

    $20,000 Reward To Arrest Killer Of 62-Year-Old Indian-American

    $20,000 Reward To Arrest Killer Of 62-Year-Old Indian-American
    Pravin Patel, 62, was shot in the chest after a robbery at the Quiznos sandwich shop in San Dimas on June 2, said Sergeant Rebecca Rodriguez of the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department, 

    $20,000 Reward To Arrest Killer Of 62-Year-Old Indian-American

    Online Comments Show Support For HPV Vaccine: Study

    Online Comments Show Support For HPV Vaccine: Study
    TORONTO — A new study suggests there's more support for HPV vaccination than one might expect, given the controversies that dogged the vaccine programs in the past.

    Online Comments Show Support For HPV Vaccine: Study

    Indian Woman With Drug-resistant TB Sets Off Scare In 3 US States

    Indian Woman With Drug-resistant TB Sets Off Scare In 3 US States
    An Indian woman infected with a rare drug-resistant strain of tuberculosis has created a health scare in three US states and for people on her flight and is now being treated in a special isolation facility near Washington

    Indian Woman With Drug-resistant TB Sets Off Scare In 3 US States