On which surfаces оf the dentitiоn dоes cаlculus most commonly аccumulate?
Tоpic B: Sexuаl Cоnsent & EthicsA university is revising its sexuаl miscоnduct policy specificаlly for cases where both parties were voluntarily intoxicated. The disciplinary committee is debating between three approaches:Policy X: "No disciplinary action when both parties were voluntarily intoxicated, as both bear equal responsibility for their impaired judgment"Policy Y: "Investigate to determine which party was more impaired or more responsible, and hold only that party accountable"Policy Z: "Hold both parties responsible for failure to ensure valid consent, but impose reduced penalties compared to cases where one party was sober"Your Task:Part 1: Theoretical Positions (30 points)Explain which policy each theorist would prefer and why:a) Roiphe's position: Which policy would she prefer? Use her concept of women as "autonomous adults responsible for the consequences of their use of alcohol."b) Pineau's position: Which policy would she prefer? Reference her "communicative sexuality" standard and the duty both parties have to ensure valid consent.c) Dixon's position: Dixon agrees with Pineau morally but has concerns about legal enforcement. How might his position differ from Pineau's when choosing between these policies?Part 2: Framework Application (35 points)Apply key concepts from the course to analyze these policies:a) Perverse incentive analysis: Explain why Policy X creates a "perverse incentive" that undermines Pineau's goals. What behavior would this policy inadvertently encourage? Why is this the opposite of what Pineau wants?b) Enforcement challenges: Explain one practical problem with fairly enforcing Policy Y or Policy Z. Consider issues like evidence, determining relative responsibility, or the problem of preemptive accusations.c) Error types: Using Pineau's false positive/false negative framework, identify what type of error each policy might produce. Which policy minimizes the most harmful type of error?Part 3: Your Position and Defense (35 points)Defend your own view on which policy the university should adopt:a) State your position clearly: Which policy do you think best balances the competing concerns of fairness, victim protection, and practical enforceability?b) Explain what makes it compelling: Give at least two reasons why this policy is preferable to the alternatives. Use concepts from the course (false +/-, perverse incentives, "erring on the side of no," autonomy concerns, enforcement feasibility, etc.).c) Anticipate and respond to an objection: Identify the strongest objection to your chosen policy from one of the theorists who would disagree with you (Roiphe, Pineau, or Dixon). Explain this objection fairly, then respond to it. Your response should show why your position can address this concern or why the objection, though legitimate, doesn't outweigh your policy's advantages.Day 1:Roiphe, Pineau, and Dixon's positions make their choice of policy seem fairly obvious. Roiphe stands by women having as much autonomy and control over alcohol ingestion as men do. She argues that people infantilize women and by doing so set back feminism and lead to the devaluation of the word rape. Roiphe would most likely be in favor of Policy X, as it upholds her ideals of women and their autonomy of choice to drink and ability to consider the consequences of drinking too much. Pineau would most likely be in favor of Policy Z, as their position is somewhat opposite of Roiphe's position. Pineau's position is that communicating consent is very important. Even if someone says yes, it is on the other party to determine if they are too drunk and are incapable of providing adequate consent. Unlike Roiphe who thinks no one should be punished for this, Pineau believes it is a crime and therefore should be against the law. Hence, she would favor Policy Z which provides action from the law to both parties. Mostly likely she would hope that in doing so both parties with be more mindful of not making false positives. Dixon and Pineau do agree morally, but not necessarily legally. Dixon believes that by writing these rules into law it will do what Roiphe argues against: devaluing rape. Dixon would most likely agree with Policy Y, where an investigation is launched and only one guilty party is punished.Policy X defies Pineau's goals by incentivizing people hoping to get lucky to drink and to pick a drinking victim, as neither party would be in trouble after the fact. Pineau's goals are to have clear communication involving consent. By inadvertently encouraging getting intoxicated, Policy X undermines any chance at clear and honest consent. Policies X and Y have different problems. They struggle with enforcement, as a lot of "evidence" is going to not only be word of mouth but also most likely from people drinking heavily. Also, determining who is more responsible would be very difficult. One way to go about it would be to find out who was more drunk, but if it's not reported until several days later there would be no tangible way to determine this. Policy Y struggles with enforcement more as it requires an investigation that will most likely not be up to standard. However, Policy Z does have a problem accusation. If Policy Z was enacted, it would lead to real victims not coming forward as they would also be punished.Policy Z would most likely incentivize true positives and negatives to be given, Policy Y would most likely incentivize both true and false negatives, and Policy X would incentivize both true and false positives.I think Policy Y is most compelling policy. It protects the victim by punishing the perpetrator and is fair because it is based on an investigation. It is not the best for practical enforcement, but I believe the other policies are so much worse at protecting the victims that it is outweighed by the effectiveness of the other factors. The only reason this is an issue is because many victims go unheard. The other policies incentivize victims to not speak up as either they will be punished again, or nothing will happen anyways. This policy allows people to exercise their autonomy without having to stress about becoming a speechless victim. Roiphe would most likely argue against this, stating that our "victims" under this policy chose to drink and to give them the respect for their autonomy that they deserve. They are in fact not victims, just people upset after the fact, especially in cases of false positives. This is a legitimate argument as false positives are hard to determine in an investigation. But this in in of itself incentivizes not giving out false positives.In addition to continuing to fill out and develop your answers consider the following: Day 2 Extension: You argued (with some misgivings) that Policy Y is best because "it protects the victim by punishing the perpetrator" based on an investigation. Consider this specific case:Two students, Alex and Blake, meet at a party. Both have been drinking steadily for two hours. Security footage shows both were unsteady, and witnesses say both had slurred speech. They go back to Alex's room and have sex. The next day, Alex reports to the university that they felt too drunk to consent. Blake immediately counter-reports, saying they also felt too impaired and that Alex initiated. Both sincerely believe they were the more impaired party. The investigation finds: both had similar amounts to drink, both texted friends beforehand saying they were "pretty drunk," and neither can clearly remember who initiated physical contact.Under your preferred Policy Y, the university must investigate and "hold only that party accountable" who was more responsible. In 150-250 words: What specific criteria should the investigation use to determine who was "more responsible" in this case? If the evidence truly suggests equal impairment and equal failure to "err on the side of no," does your policy have a fair way to handle this? Does this scenario reveal a limitation you need to address, or can Policy Y handle it well?
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