School Violence Lawyer


Books & Articles

Other Articles

Video Voyeurism Case Nets $300,000 Verdict
© Lawyers Weekly USA

DC Liable on Sexual Assault Claim
© Metro Verdicts Monthly

College Athletes Acting Badly: It's All There on the Internet
© New York Times

Inadequate Security
© Trial

Brutal Rituals, Dangerous Rites
© asbj.com

A Rite Gone Terribly Wrong
© Sports Illustrated

Too Cruel for School
© People Magazine

48 School Deaths Highest in Years
© USA Today

Sexual Misconduct by School Workers Found Widespread
© The Wall Street Journal

Representing Victims of Hazing
Douglas E. Fierberg, Esq.

Animal House
© APBnews.com

Broken Pledges
© Black Issues in Higher Ed.

Jones v. Kappa
© Synthesis: Law and Policy in Higher Education

Violent Cast
© The New York Times

Dying To Drink:   Confronting Binge Drinking on College Campuses
(Rodale 2002)

Federal health officials report that more high school students are absent from school because they feel unsafe. Concerns about school safety have prompted approximately five percent of students to stay home from school at least one day per month, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. This is an increase from similar reports from the early 1990s. CDC researchers also reported that the number of students who reported being threatened with weapons on school property had increased during the same period of time.

The National School Safety Center (www.nssc1.org) publishes an in-depth, valuable survey of articles, studies, and other research information on aspects of school safety and school climate.

In July, 2004, it was reported that more than 4.5 million children in e public schools are subject to sexual misconduct by school personnel, ranging from inappropriate comments to acts of physical abuse.

An August 1999 study by Alfred University establishes that 79 percent of male and female athletes playing for NCAA team are being hazed as a condition of joining college athletic teams. Of those hazed in college, 5 percent said they were first hazed in middle school; another 42 percent reported that they experienced their first hazing initiation in high school sports.

I hope that some of the references on this site help you understand the compelling need to take action now to protect students and make schools safer.

Douglas E. Fierberg is a trial lawyer and partner in the Washington, D.C. law firm of Bode & Grenier, L.L.P.

 
 

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Douglas Fierberg, Esq. | Toll Free: 1.877.WashDC.1 (1.877.927.4321) | 1150 Connecticut Avenue, N.W. Ninth Floor | Washington, DC 20036
Phone: 202.828.4100 | Fax: 202.828.4130

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