Frankly there is no clarity. There is no evidence the rape is a lie. There is no evidence it isn't a lie.
Bingo. And if Derec had started this thread on that basis, the discussion of whether the university should have allowed her specific targeted activist activity, and/or accepted it as part of her thesis project could have been an interesting one.
Regardless whether he is guilty of rape or not, regardless whether she is telling the truth or not - I see this situation as the flip side to the question of how it affects a victim to allow a rapist to continue to attend the same university. There is the case wherein the male was determined to be a rapist but his "expulsion" was not to take affect until after his graduation, for instance. There have been many studies on the re-victimization and hostile environment created by that type of approach.
So let's assume, hypothetically, that the woman in this case is lying about the entire thing. Isn't allowing her to "rapist-shame" him just as bad as the "slut-shaming" that happens to rape victims?
Or, let's assume hypothetically that she was raped, that he did rape her, that she is telling the truth. Does that now make her activist activity ok? Where is the free speech line? Is it defamation to name one's rapist? Is it ok to name him only if the courts convict him? What about the fact that the police/court system is notorious for failing to prosecute rapists? Is it right that a rape victim's right to free speech in naming her rapist should be limited to the ability of the justice system to successfully prosecute these cases? What other form of speech is similarly limited?
But in the absence of a conviction, how do we balance a victim's right to name her rapist with or without said conviction against a man's right to not be "rapist-shamed" by a lying woman. And how do we do that in a society wherein certain types of people will AlWAYS assume she is lying no matter what (often even with the man being convicted) How do we protect an innocent man against such reputation ruining accusations while preventing the silencing of the overwhelming number of real rape victims?
And where was the line in this case? What part of her actions was the line too far for Derec and company? Was it the mattress she carried? What if she had carried a sign instead? What if she simply told everyone who would listen than he had raped her? What if she had done nothing more than name him in the original complaint? At what point would Derec and company like to silence this particular woman, and how should that line be applied in general?
And how should the university have responded? Let's assume hypothetically that the man's guilt was undeniable, and he had been convicted and was in prison. Would it have then been ok for her to carry her mattress as part of her thesis about victims of rape? With or without his presence on campus, carrying her mattress was a powerful symbol of the slut-shaming that happens to rape victims everywhere. Would that type of performance piece been acceptable to Derec and company if the man had been found guilty in a court of law? Is it only unacceptable because of the ambiguous nature of this case?
Or what if the man was not a fellow student; rather someone who lived off campus? Or what if her thesis project itself didn't name her rapist at all (& I'm not sure that it did). The information would be part of public record when she named him in the original police report. Is she now forbidden from ever becoming an activist, or ever using the subject of rape in her art, because people (including the accused) can assume from public record that she's referring to him? If her entire project never named her accused rapist, would that have made her project ok? Even if public record reveals who she accused?
Or is she to be forever silenced in every way because the system did not find him guilty? As Zorg noted:
There is no evidence the rape is a lie. There is no evidence it isn't a lie.