We’re glad to continue improving our databases and have just implemented several interface updates. These changes will consolidate and streamline our resources, ease navigation, and provide statistics on our databases that were previously unavailable.
Databases Integrated With Main Website
Going forward, we will be centering more activity on our main titleixforall.com website. Historically, our databases have been housed offsite at a different URL. They are now integrated directly into the main website (Title IX Lawsuits Database) with dedicated pages linked off the main menu. Your old links will still work, so there is no need to change them.
“Simple” and “Advanced” Searching Implemented
When searching for lawsuits in the Title IX Lawsuits Database, users can now toggle between “Simple” and “Advanced” searches. Simple searches allow searches of up to nine data points; advanced searches query combinations up to a massive thirty-two (!) data points. Users can toggle their search preferences in two places: just above the search engine, and in their account settings page.
Changelog Overhauled
We’ve added a “Stats” page to the Changelog which will show the total data points across all database records. The current total is just shy of 500,000.
As of the writing of this post on 10/27/2019, we have made 6,160 individual updates to the Title IX Lawsuits Database since it was relaunched on 11/29/2018. That’s a lot…and it’s also an underestimate since the changelog doesn’t capture all the work we do.
That also means the changelog, which has tracked most of our 6,000+ updates in the last year, has grown massively. For these reasons, and also for storage constraints, we have redesigned the changelog to show only the most recent updates across all major record types (lawsuits, files, courts, attorneys, judges, etc.), as well as a chronological summary of feature implementations.
When we relaunched the Title IX Lawsuits Database, we promised ten consecutive monthly feature updates. This is our eleventh. We have more updates planned, although we are no longer necessarily operating strictly on an end-of-the-month release cycle. Stay tuned for more.
This concludes our feature update. Thank you for your interest in our work.
We’re glad to continue improving our databases and have just implemented several interface updates. These changes will consolidate and streamline our resources, ease navigation, and provide statistics on our databases that were previously unavailable.
Databases Integrated With Main Website
Going forward, we will be centering more activity on our main titleixforall.com website. Historically, our databases have been housed offsite at a different URL. They are now integrated directly into the main website (Title IX Lawsuits Database) with dedicated pages linked off the main menu. Your old links will still work, so there is no need to change them.
“Simple” and “Advanced” Searching Implemented
When searching for lawsuits in the Title IX Lawsuits Database, users can now toggle between “Simple” and “Advanced” searches. Simple searches allow searches of up to nine data points; advanced searches query combinations up to a massive thirty-two (!) data points. Users can toggle their search preferences in two places: just above the search engine, and in their account settings page.
Changelog Overhauled
We’ve added a “Stats” page to the Changelog which will show the total data points across all database records. The current total is just shy of 500,000.
As of the writing of this post on 10/27/2019, we have made 6,160 individual updates to the Title IX Lawsuits Database since it was relaunched on 11/29/2018. That’s a lot…and it’s also an underestimate since the changelog doesn’t capture all the work we do.
That also means the changelog, which has tracked most of our 6,000+ updates in the last year, has grown massively. For these reasons, and also for storage constraints, we have redesigned the changelog to show only the most recent updates across all major record types (lawsuits, files, courts, attorneys, judges, etc.), as well as a chronological summary of feature implementations.
When we relaunched the Title IX Lawsuits Database, we promised ten consecutive monthly feature updates. This is our eleventh. We have more updates planned, although we are no longer necessarily operating strictly on an end-of-the-month release cycle. Stay tuned for more.
This concludes our feature update. Thank you for your interest in our work.
Accused Students Database
Research due process and similar lawsuits by students accused of Title IX violations (sexual assault, harassment, dating violence, stalking, etc.) in higher education.
OCR Resolutions Database
Research resolved Title IX investigations of K-12 and postsecondary institutions by the Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights (OCR).
Attorneys Directory
A basic directory for looking up Title IX attorneys, most of whom have represented parties in litigation by accused students.