China vows tougher action on academics accused of sexual misconduct

Chinaโ€™s top education authority on Monday promised to act against sexual assault and harassment on college campuses, saying that educators who face allegations of sexual misconduct would face stronger consequences in the future.

  • The pledge is statedย in a set of new guidelinesย (in Chinese) released by the Ministry of Education and six other central government agencies on December 16, titled โ€œDirectives to Improve Teachersโ€™ Morality and Professional Ethics in the New Era.โ€
  • Problems highlighted in the document include instructors offering tutoring services outside of schools, teachers receiving gifts from students and parents, and academics sexually harassing students.
  • Offending teachers will be subject to various degreesย of punishment; serious violations could lead to lifetime bans from teaching. The document also says the Ministry will build an online platform for complaints about misconduct, as well as a comprehensive system to check the backgrounds of prospective teachers, especially their criminal records.
  • While the guidelines coverย teaching staff at all schools across China, the part on sexual harassment applies only to higher-education institutes.
  • The directives arrived in the wake of two high-profile sexual misconduct scandals that were brought to light in the past few weeks: Earlier this month, the Shanghai University of Finance and Economics fired an associate professorย after sexual harassment allegations. About a week later, Peking University sacked an assistant professorย after receiving complaints that he had sexual relationships with several female students.

โ€”Jiayun Feng