Chapter 9: Problems of Social Justice No one in the United States can be excluded from participation in any educational program or activity, loss of interest, or discrimination that accepts federal financial assistance based on gender. (Preface of Title IX) Title IX is a sign of social justice for American women. A woman who directly benefits from Title IX is an athlete. It gives opportunities to participate in school sports, opportunities to get the same money as sports for men, and the opportunity for women to get a sports scholarship for the first time.
Article 9 was originally aimed at concretely dealing with inequality by sex and discrimination in education. People who supported the ninth article emphasized the issue of discrimination between education and workplace, including equal wages in work and workplace, gender bias in school texts, opportunities for follow-up vocation over the lifetime. However, immediately after Title IX, women's athletics competed rapidly between the 1970s and the 1980s. Currently, title IX is actually synonymous with women's athletics. Over time, the focus of chapter 9 has changed from gender disparity in education to gender disparity in sports, and a revolution in women's athletics was held.
Women's equal need for security and education was once a bipartisan community. The Republican government signed the ninth law in 1972. The Republican Party and the Democratic Party have announced policies and rules to fulfill Article 9 equal duties. The Supreme Court judge appointed by the president of the aisle reaffirmed the school's obligation to prevent students from learning with male fellows by sexual violence. It is not surprising that recent infringement of the rights of survivors was done under the control of the president who boasted about women who received sexual assault. Candice Jackson, Assistant Secretary for Public Rights, proposed to the government in July (she apologized later) complaints of sexual act against "90%" of campus sexual assault allegations But
Article 9 applies to all aspects of education and school education systems. In the 1990s, the US Supreme Court issued three decisions that clarify that Article 9 requires that it properly respond to sexual harassment against schools and reports of sexual violence against students. According to the civil rights office in 2011, organizations such as civil rights activists and the American Civil Liberation Union (ACLU) say, "If students are harassed by sexual violence, they will be deprived of the right of equal and free education," I insist. "Sexual harassment including sexual violence interferes with the rights of students who are not discriminated against, and is a crime in case of sexual violence" issued in April.