Ivy League Universities Unveil New Programs to Combat Drinking
This fall, seven of the eight Ivy League universities
introduced new alcohol policies in an effort to combat high-risk
drinking, the Yale Daily News reports.
The new policies at Yale, Columbia, Cornell, Dartmouth, Princeton,
University of Pennsylvania and Harvard emphasize educational programming
over direct disciplinary approaches, the article notes.
“We are in a wave where many universities are trying to curb
high-risk drinking,” Yale Assistant Dean of Undergraduate Affairs
Melanie Boyd told the newspaper. “There is a lot of research that
high-risk drinking has risen in recent years.”
Close to 40 percent of college students in the United States engage in binge drinking,
and that number has remained virtually unchanged for decades. Almost
2,000 college students in the U.S. die each year from alcohol-related
injuries. An estimated 600,000 students are injured while under the
influence, according to the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and
Alcoholism.
Administrators from Dartmouth launched the National College Health
Improvement Project in 2010. This project includes 32 colleges and
universities that are collecting data on the effectiveness of alcohol
regulation policies on campus.
At Yale, all off-campus parties must now be registered with the
Dean’s Office. Two new committees have been formed to address alcohol
and drug use among students. Students at several Ivy League institutions
said a number of new alcohol-related policies are aimed at fraternities
and sororities. Dartmouth has instituted a ban on punch at parties held
by fraternity and sorority houses, and conducts random walkthroughs at
the houses by safety and security officers.
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