Court, (n.); A system that judges the existence, culpability, and results of infractions of some or all forms of law.
"Colleges should not be allowed to set up their own courts." -MetalSlimeHunt
Sure! They're not. What these arbitration courts decide has nothing to do with any form of law. They don't judge the existence of laws, they don't determine cupability in relation to laws, and they have nothing to do with the results of infractions against laws. Unless, again, there is some
really weird shit going on I can't remember hearing about.
The school code of conduct, and the various powers given to the school by the contracts signed, are not laws in any sense of the word I'm familiar with.
... now, if you want to gripe about contract law, good gods do you have a lot of room to gripe about contract law. There's a lot of room to gripe about contract law.
Regardless, there's a legally established principle that a contract that lacks basic fairness isn't enforceable or allowable.
Yeeeaaaaaahhh, there is, but it's in a very,
very conceptual sense. Contract law rulings (well, besides "GTFO of my courtroom") in regards to that sort of thing almost never happens except when people of diminished mental capacity are involved. There is a freaking
ridiculous amount of wiggle room if both parties are of sound and legally competent mind. What the schools are doing isn't even scratching the surface of
that damned pit of horrors, heh.
Your sense of basic fairness (mine, too, and probably most people's) and what our legal system considers basic fairness is... very different. It's one of those cases where the general use word is not really 1:1 in meaning with the technical use in the field in question.