Our free, searchable database features publicly available information on hazing incidents. By shining a light on hazing, we work to protect college students and help them make informed decisions about clubs, teams and organizations they may want to join.
Our goal is straightforward: to end hazing through access to data that exposes hazing incidents on college campuses across the US.
Use our “Campus Lookup” feature to learn about hazing at your college or university. What you find may surprise you.
Another springtime surge in hazing incidents this year underscores the urgency of greater transparency about hazing. In just the past three months:
Seven states. Ten fraternities. And one deeply entrenched problem: toxic hazing culture.
These are just the incidents we know about because they made headlines. Many other hazing incidents are quietly "handled" by campus administrators, national fraternity organizations, and others anxious to keep hazing incidents under wraps and out of the news.
It’s a challenge for students and families to find timely information about hazing incidents on their campuses. That’s no accident.
Colleges, universities and national student organizations like fraternities and sororities make it challenging to unearth those reports–if they are available at all.
HazingInfo.org collects data from hazing incident reports at schools that are required to provide that information by law. Currently, nine states mandate public reporting about hazing incidents: Georgia, Louisiana, New Jersey, Ohio, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, Texas, Virginia, and Washington. Indiana will require reporting as of July 1.
We also gather data from credible media sources to capture the most up-to-date information, rather than waiting for months or years for those incidents to appear in official reports.
While hazing is often considered a fraternity and sorority problem, we know from the data that hazing takes place in many different types of student clubs, athletic teams, marching bands and other student organizations.
Our database currently contains hazing of all types at colleges and universities in the nine states where reporting is required.
Our team is continuing to add new data until all 50 states are represented on our website.
HazingInfo.org is a partnership between the University of Maine, the University of Washington Information School, and the national research organization StopHazing, along with founders Jolayne Houtz and Hector Martinez, who lost their son, Sam, to hazing in 2019.
Our data collection and website are powered by a team of UW Information School students harnessing their data science skills to raise awareness about hazing and hazing prevention.
Together, we are united by our vision: a world where no one is harmed or killed by hazing.
We invite you to explore HazingInfo.org! Share your ideas and thoughts with us at info@hazinginfo.org.