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Title: Gender Equity Education Act Ch
Date: 2023.08.16
Legislative: Presidential Decree Hua-Zhong (1) Yi-Zi No. 11200069321 promulgated on August 16, 2023: Amendments to all 48 articles of the Act. These amendments shall take effect from the date of promulgation, with the exception of the provisions of Paragraph 2 of Article
2, Subparagraph 2 and Item 4 of Subparagraph 3 of Article 3, Paragraph 2 of Article 5, Articles 7 through 9, Article 21, Article 29, Article 30, proviso to the former part of Paragraph 2 and Paragraph 3 of Article 33, Article 37, Article 40, and Article 44,
which shall take effect on March 8, 2024.
Content: Chapter 1 General Provisions

Article 1
This Act is prescribed in order to promote substantive gender 
equality, eliminate gender discrimination, uphold human dignity, 
and improve and establish the education resources and environment
for gender equality.
The definitional scope of a campus sexual harassment incident 
shall be determined in accordance with the provisions of this Act.
In cases where the relationship between the parties involved does
not fall within the definitional scope stipulated in this Act, 
the relevant provisions of the Gender Equality in Employment Act 
or the Sexual Harassment Prevention Act shall be applied as 
appropriate to the circumstances.

Article 2
The competent authority as referred to in this Act shall be as 
follows: in the central government, the Ministry of Education; 
in special municipalities, the municipal government; in counties 
(cities), the county (city) government.
When handling matters specified in this Act at military academies, 
preparatory schools, police academies of all levels, and juvenile 
correctional institutions, the competent authority with jurisdiction 
shall be deemed the competent authority as referred to in this Act.
When matters specified in this Act involve the affairs of competent 
authorities with their responsibilities, each shall comply with this 
Act in its handling of these matters.

Article 3
The following terms that appear in this Act are hereby defined:
1. Gender equity education: to generate respect for gender 
diversity, eliminate gender discrimination and promote substantive 
gender equality through education.
2. School, teacher, staff, worker, and student:
  1. School: public and private schools of all levels, military 
academies, preparatory schools, police academies of all levels, and 
juvenile correctional institutions.
  2. Teacher: full-time instructors, part-time instructors, acting 
     faculty, substitute teachers, military instructors, volunteer 
     teaching assistants, education interns directly involved in 
     teaching, education internship program supervisors, and other 
     individuals engaged in teaching or research.
  3. Staff (member) or worker: individuals other than those listed 
     above who perform fixed or regular school-related duties, 
     volunteers assisting in school operations, student affairs 
     innovation specialists, and individuals as designated by the 
     central competent authority.
  4. Student: individuals currently enrolled at a school, 
     individuals not currently enrolled but in the process of 
     transitioning from enrollment in one school to another within 
     the educational system, continuing education program enrollees, 
     exchange students, educational internship students or trainees, 
     and other individuals as designated by the central competent 
     authority.
3. Gender-related incident on campus: incidents in which one party 
   is a school principal, teacher, staff member, worker, or student, 
   and the other party is a student, and which meets one of the 
   following conditions:
   i) Sexual assault: acts constituting criminal sexual assault as 
      defined in the Sexual Assault Crime Prevention Act.
   ii) Sexual harassment: acts meeting one of the following criteria 
       but not constituting sexual assault:
     1. Engaging in unwelcome sex- or gender-related speech or 
        behavior, whether explicit or implied, which adversely affect 
        the other party's personal dignity, learning, or work 
        opportunities or performance.
     2. Sex- or gender-related behavior that serves as the condition 
        for oneself or others to gain or lose rights or interests in 
        learning or work.
   iii) Sexual bullying: ridicule, attacks, or threats directed at 
        another person’s gender characteristics, gender temperaments, 
        sexual orientation, or gender identity by using verbal, 
        physical or other forms of violence will be under the category 
        of sexual bullying not sexual harassment.
   iv) Sex- or gender-related behavior by a principal or faculty 
       member that violates professional ethical standards: cases where 
       a principal or faculty member develops an intimate relationship 
       with an underage student, or exploits an unequal power 
       relationship in the course of teaching, providing guidance to, 
       training, evaluating, managing, or counseling a student, or 
       providing a work opportunity to a student, to develop a 
       relationship that violates professional ethical standards in the 
       context of sex- or gender-related interpersonal interactions.
4. Gender identity: an individual's perception and acceptance of his or 
   her own gender.

Article 4
The central competent authority shall establish a gender equity 
education committee whose tasks include:
1. Draft laws, regulations, policies and annual projects related to 
   gender equity education at national level.
2. Coordinate and integrate related resources, assist and fund the 
   regional competent authority and schools and social education 
   institutions under its jurisdiction in order to implement and develop 
   gender equity education.
3. Supervise and evaluate gender equity-related activities carried out 
   by the regional competent authority, schools and social education 
   institutions under its jurisdiction under its jurisdiction.
4. Promote research and development of curricula, teaching, and 
   assessments on gender equity education and related issues.
5. Plan and implement gender equity education personnel training 
   programs.
6. Provide consultation services related to gender equity education, 
   and investigate and handle cases pertinent to this Act.
7. Promote gender equity in family education and social education at 
   national level.
8. Other matters related to gender equity education at national level.

Article 5
The competent authority of the municipal government at municipal level 
and the county or city government at county or city level shall 
establish a gender equity education committee whose tasks include:
1. Draft regional laws and regulations, policies and annual projects 
   related to gender equity education.
2. Coordinate and integrate related resources, assist and fund the 
   regional competent authority and schools and social education 
   institutions under its jurisdiction in order to implement and 
   develop gender equity education.
3. Supervise and evaluate gender equity-related activities carried 
   out by schools and social education institutions under its 
   jurisdiction.
4. Promote research on curricula, teaching, and assessments on gender 
   equity education and related issues.
5. Provide schools and social education institutions under its 
   jurisdiction consultation service related to gender equity 
   education, and investigate and handle cases pertinent to this Act.
6. Implement in-service education programs for faculty and personnel 
   in schools under its jurisdiction.
7. Promote gender equity in family education and social education.
8. Other regional matters related to gender equity education.
The competent authorities for military academies, preparatory schools, 
police academies of all levels, and juvenile correctional institutions 
shall establish gender equity education committees with the following 
responsibilities:
1. Provide appropriate resources to assist the schools under their 
   jurisdiction in implementing and developing gender equity education.
2. Supervise and assess the implementation of gender equity 
   education-related work at the schools under their jurisdiction.
3. Handle matters related to gender equity education at the schools 
   under their jurisdiction as stipulated in Article 5, Article 6, 
   and other relevant provisions.

Article 6
The school shall establish a gender equity education committee whose 
tasks include:
1. Integrate related resources in various departments of the school, 
   draft gender equity education projects, and implement and examine 
   the results of the projects.
2. Plan and implement activities related to gender equity education 
   for students, staff, faculty, and parents.
3. Research, develop and promote courses, teaching, and assessments 
   on gender equity education.
4. Plan implementation of gender equity education and regulations 
   for preventing and handling of gender-related incidents on campus, 
   establish mechanisms to coordinate and integrate related resources.
5. Investigate and handle cases pertinent to this Act.
6. Plan and establish a safe and gender-fair campus.
7. Promote gender equity in family education and social education at 
   community level.
8. Other matters related to gender equity at school or community level.

Article 7
The gender equity education committee of the central competent 
authority shall consist of seventeen to twenty-three members, who 
shall serve for specific terms. The Minister of Education shall be 
chair of the committee. Committee members shall have an awareness 
of gender equity and not engage in behaviors contrary to gender 
equity. At least half of the committee members shall be women. 
Experts, scholars, NGO/NPO representatives, student representatives, 
and practitioners from fields related to gender equity education shall 
make up at least two-thirds of the committee members.
The aforesaid committee shall hold at least one meeting every three 
months, and appoint staff to handle related matters. The means of the 
committee's organization, meetings, committee member qualifications, 
duration of appointment, grounds for dismissal, dismissal procedure, 
and other related matters shall be prescribed by the central competent 
authority.

Article 8
The gender equity education committee of the municipal government 
and county or city level shall consist of nine to twenty-three 
members, who shall serve specific terms. The mayor of the 
municipality, the magistrate of the county or the mayor of the city 
government shall be chair of the committee. Committee members shall 
have an awareness of gender equity and not engage in behaviors 
contrary to gender equity. At least half of the committee members 
shall be women. Experts, scholars, NGO/NPO representatives, student 
representatives, and practitioners from fields related to gender 
equity education shall make up at least one-third of the committee 
members.
The aforesaid committee shall hold at least one meeting every three 
months, and appoint staff member(s) ad hoc to handle related matters.
Guidelines regarding the committee's organization, meetings, 
committee member qualifications, duration of appointment, grounds 
for dismissal, dismissal procedure, and other related matters shall 
be prescribed by the central competent authority. Competent 
authorities at the municipal and county (city) level shall, in 
accordance with these guidelines, prescribe autonomous regulations 
governing their gender equity education committees.
The gender equity education committees of the competent authorities 
for military academies, preparatory schools, police academies of all 
levels, and juvenile correctional institutions shall consist of nine 
to twenty-three members, with fixed terms of appointment. The head 
official of the competent authority with jurisdiction over schools 
shall serve as the chairperson of the committee. Committee members 
shall have an awareness of gender equity and not engage in behaviors 
contrary to gender equity. At least half of the committee members 
shall be women. Committee members who are experts in fields related 
to gender equity education shall account for at least half of total 
committee membership.
The aforesaid committees shall hold at least one meeting every three 
months and appoint staff member(s) ad hoc to handle related matters. 
The means of the committees' organization, meetings, committee member 
qualifications, duration of appointment, grounds for dismissal, 
dismissal procedure, tasks that may be delegated to affiliated 
agencies, and other related matters shall be prescribed by the 
competent authority with jurisdiction over schools.

Article 9
The gender equity education committee of the school shall consist 
of five to twenty-one members, who shall serve specific terms. The 
school principal or president shall be chair of the committee. The 
committee members shall have an awareness of gender equity and not
engage in behaviors contrary to gender equity. At least one half 
of the committee members shall be women. Representatives of faculty, 
staff, parents, students, and experts and scholars from fields 
related to gender equity education may be invited to be committee
members.
The aforesaid committee shall hold at least one meeting every three 
months, and appoint a staff member or teacher ad hoc to handle 
related matters. Guidelines regarding the committee's organization,
meetings, committee member qualifications, duration of appointment, 
grounds for dismissal, dismissal procedure, and other related matters 
shall be prescribed by the central competent authority. Schools shall,
in accordance with these guidelines, prescribe relevant regulations 
governing their gender equity education committees.

Article 10
The competent authority shall designate budgeting in accordance 
with all the projects planned by its gender equity education 
committee.

Article 11
The competent authority shall supervise schools, social education 
institutions, or institutions under its jurisdiction to carry out 
tasks pertinent to gender equity education, as well as provide 
assistance where necessary. Those who accomplish significant 
achievements shall be awarded, whereas those who have substandard 
achievements shall be corrected and supervised for improvement.


Chapter 2 Learning environment and resources

Article 12
The school shall provide a gender-fair learning environment, 
respect and give due consideration to students, faculty, and 
staff with different gender, gender temperaments, gender identity, 
and sexual orientation. Moreover, it shall establish a safe campus 
environment.
The school shall prescribe and promulgate regulations for 
implementing gender equity education.

Article 13
The school shall not discriminate against a prospective student 
during recruitment or evaluation of applications for admission on 
the basis of his or her gender, gender temperaments, gender identity 
or sexual orientation. With the approval of the competent authority, 
this requirement will not apply to schools, classes and curricula 
with a specific historical tradition, special education objectives, 
or other reasons unrelated to gender.

Article 14
The school shall not discriminate against students on the basis 
of their gender, gender temperaments, gender identity, or sexual 
orientation in its instruction, activities, assessments, rewards 
and penalties, benefits, or services. This requirement does not 
apply to matters suitable only to persons of a specific gender, 
gender temperaments, gender identity, or sexual orientation.
The school shall proactively provide assistance to students who 
are disadvantaged due to their gender, gender temperaments, gender 
identity, or sexual orientation with the aim of improving their 
circumstances.

Article 15
The school shall proactively protect the right to education of 
pregnant students, and provide needed assistance.

Article 16
Gender equity education shall be included in pre-service training 
of staff members, orientation training of new staff members, 
in-service education program and preparation program for educational 
administrators, the same in professional teacher training programs 
in colleges and universities.

Article 17
At least one-third of members of Staff Appraisal Committee, 
Grievance Review Committee, and Faculty Evaluation Committee 
at the school level, as well as the Faculty Grievance Review 
Committee of the competent authority with jurisdiction, shall 
consist of either sex. This requirement need not apply to schools 
whose number of faculty members of either sex is lower than 
one-third of the total number of Faculty Evaluation Committee 
members.

Chapter 3 Curriculum, teaching materials and instruction

Article 18
The school shall design curriculum and activities to encourage 
students to develop their potential and shall not discriminate 
students on the basis of their gender.
Elementary and junior high schools, in addition to integrating 
gender equity education into their curriculum, shall provide at 
least four hours of courses or activities on gender equity 
education each semester.
Senior high schools shall integrate gender equity education in 
their curriculum, the same as the five-year junior colleges in 
the first three years of their curriculum.
Universities and colleges shall offer a wide range of courses on 
gender studies.
Schools shall develop course planning and assessment methods in 
accordance to principles of gender equity education.

Article 19
The compilation, composition, review and selection of course 
materials shall comply with the principles of gender equity 
education. The content of teaching materials shall present 
fairly on the historical contributions, life experiences of
both sexes, and diverse gender perspectives.

Article 20
When using teaching materials and engaging in educational 
activities, teachers shall maintain an awareness of gender 
equity, eliminate gender stereotypes, and avoid gender prejudice
and discrimination.
Teachers shall encourage students to take courses in fields that 
are not traditionally affiliated with their gender.


Chapter 4 Prevention and handling of gender-related incidents on campus

Article 21
The central competent authority shall establish guidelines for 
preventing and handling gender-related incidents on campus. These 
guidelines shall include campus safety plans, matters needing 
attention regarding on- and off-campus instruction and activities 
as well as interpersonal interaction, ethical considerations for 
principals and faculty members regarding sex- or gender-related 
matters, matters related to self-initiated disclosure, and handling 
mechanisms, procedures, and relief for gender-related incidents 
on campus.
Schools shall prescribe and promulgate prevention and control 
regulations in accordance with the aforesaid guidelines. Schools 
at the senior high and higher levels shall prescribe and promulgate 
relevant regulations or professional ethical standards in 
accordance with the previous Paragraph.
Schools shall actively promote education on the prevention of 
gender-related incidents, with the aim of increasing respect among 
principals, teachers, staff members, workers, and students for the 
bodily autonomy of others and oneself. Schools shall conduct annual 
gender-related incident prevention education and advocacy events, 
and evaluate their effectiveness.

Article 22
Should a principal, teacher, staff member, or worker become aware 
of a suspected gender-related incident occurring at the school 
where they are employed, they shall report the incident to the 
school authorities designated in the school's prevention and control 
regulations. The school authorities shall handle the matter in 
accordance with the following provisions no later than twenty-four 
hours after receiving the report:
1. Report the incident to the school's competent authority.
2. Report the incident to the competent social welfare authority of 
   the municipality or county (city) where the school is located in 
   accordance with the Sexual Assault Crime Prevention Act, The 
   Protection of Children and Youths Welfare and Rights Act, the 
   People with Disabilities Rights Protection Act, and other 
   pertinent laws and regulations.
The principal, teacher, staff member, or worker of the school shall 
not falsify, alter, destroy, or conceal evidence of gender-related 
incidents on campus in which others are implicated.
In handling a gender-related incident on campus, the school or 
competent authority shall turn over the case to its Gender Equity 
Education Committee for investigation and handling. No person shall 
establish any other means of investigation, and the results of 
investigations conducted by violators shall be null and void.

Article 23
When investigating a gender-related incident on campus, the school 
or competent authority shall be objective, fair and professional, 
allowing both involved parties sufficient opportunities to make 
their statements and respond to allegations. Repetitive interrogation 
shall be avoided.
The involved parties' and informant's name and other information that 
may lead to personal identification shall be kept confidential, except
when necessary for investigative purposes or to allay public safety 
concerns.

Article 24
When investigating a gender-related incident on campus, the school 
or competent authority shall take necessary measures for the 
protection of the involved parties' rights to education and 
employment, and must not use unequal power or status to act in a
manner that could affect the victim's rights to education or 
employment, or to request an investigation.

Article 25
In handling a gender-related incident on campus, the school or 
competent authority shall inform the victim and his/her guardian 
or de facto custodian of his/her rights and avenues for relief, 
or refer him/her to relevant institutions for resolution. In 
addition, based on his/her needs, psychological counseling and 
guidance, or other types of professional services shall be 
provided. When necessary, protective measures, legal assistance, 
referrals to social welfare resources, or other assistance shall 
be provided. When an informant is at risk of harm, necessary 
protective measures or other assistance shall be provided.
The school or competent authority shall appoint a physician, 
clinical psychologist, counseling psychologist, social worker, or 
lawyer to provide the aforementioned psychological counseling and 
guidance, protective measures, legal assistance, or other assistance.
If a student is the victim of sexual assault, sexual harassment, or 
sexual bullying, but is not within the definitional scope of this 
Act, the school with which the student is affiliated may apply the 
provisions of the preceding two Paragraphs accordingly.

Article 26
Once a gender-related incident on campus has been investigated 
and established as having actually occurred by the school or 
competent authority in accordance with the pertinent laws or 
regulations, the school or competent authority shall itself 
impose a formal reprimand, demerit, dismissal, suspension, 
non-renewal of contract, discharge from employment, termination 
of a contractual relationship, termination of a service 
relationship, or some other appropriate penalty on the offender, 
or transfer him or her to another authorized agency with the 
jurisdiction to do so.
When handling a gender-related incident on campus, the school, 
competent authority, or other authorized agency with the 
jurisdiction to take disciplinary measures and impose penalties 
shall in addition order that the offender receive psychological 
counseling, and may also order that he/she must comply with one 
or more of the following measures, except for an offender already
subject to a lifetime ban on appointment, employment, contractual 
relationship, or service relationship.
1. Apologize to the victim, if the victim, his/her legal guardian, 
   or his/her de facto custodian gives consent. When a legal guardian 
  or de facto custodian consents, the best interests of the child or 
  minor shall be given priority, and his/her opinions shall be weighed 
  based on his/her level of mental maturity.
2. Attend eight hours of gender equity education related courses.
3. Other measures that serve an educational purpose.
The school or competent authority shall appoint a physician, clinical 
psychologist, counseling psychologist, social worker, or lawyer to 
provide the aforementioned psychological counseling and guidance.
In cases in which the incident of sexual harassment, sexual bullying, 
or sex- or gender-related behavior by a principal or faculty member 
that violates professional ethical standards was not serious in 
nature, the school, competent authority, or authorized agency may 
just act in accordance with the stipulations of Paragraph 2, as the 
necessary element of handling the matter.
When any disciplinary measure referred to in Paragraph 1 involves a 
change to the offender’s status, the offender shall be given an 
opportunity to make a written statement presenting his or her views.
Any disciplinary measure listed in Paragraph 2 shall be implemented 
by the school or competent authority that imposes it, and when doing 
so, the school or competent authority shall take all necessary 
measures to ensure the offender’s full cooperation and compliance.
When Subparagraph 1 of Paragraph 2 is applied and the involved parties 
are both students, the school may utilize restorative justice or other 
counseling strategies to encourage relationship repair.

Article 27
During the investigation of a gender-related incident on campus, 
the school or competent authority may make public a description 
of pertinent matters, handling methods, and principles where 
necessary. After the case has been closed and upon the approval 
of the victim, his/her guardian, or his/her de facto custodian, 
the school or competent authority may also make public whether 
the case is established, the type of the case, and handling method 
of the case. Party names and other information that may lead to 
their identification shall not be revealed.

Article 28
The school or competent authority shall establish a database of 
gender-related incidents on campus, as well as profiles of offenders.
If the offender is a student and transfers to another school for 
studies, the former competent authority and the school where the 
offender originally studied shall, in such cases as they consider 
there to be a need for follow-up counseling, notify the new school 
where the offender studies within one month of the date of knowing 
such transfer.
If the offender is not a student and transfers to another school 
for employment, the former competent authority and the school where 
the offender was originally employed shall provide follow-up 
counseling, and notify the new school where the offender is 
employed within one month of the date of knowing such transfer.
The notified school described in the previous two Paragraphs shall 
keep track of the offender and provide counseling where necessary.
The school shall not reveal the offender’s name or other information 
that may lead to his or her identification without legitimate reason.
The establishment, means of retention, duration of retention, 
destruction, and use of the database mentioned in Paragraph 1, 
and the school notification and other pertinent matters mentioned 
in Paragraphs 2 and 3, shall be prescribed in accordance with the 
principles of prevention prescribed in Article 21, Paragraph 1.

Article 29
If an investigation conducted by the gender equity education 
committee of a school or by an appropriate committee set up in 
accordance with the law confirms that any of the circumstances 
listed below apply to an educator that the school has appointed 
or employed, or to some other staff member with whom the school 
has entered a contract or whose services it has engaged, the 
educational institution shall dismiss the person, revoke their 
appointment, terminate the contractual relationship, or terminate 
the service relationship, as applicable:
1. In cases of sexual assault, or in cases of sexual harassment, 
   sexual bullying, or sex- or gender-related behavior by a principal 
   or faculty member that violates professional ethical standards and 
   warrants a lifetime ban on appointment, employment, contractual 
   relationships, or service relationships.
2. In cases of sexual harassment, sexual bullying, or sex- or 
   gender-related behavior by a principal or faculty member that 
   violates professional ethical standards where it is necessary 
   to dismiss the person, revoke his/her appointment, terminate the 
   contractual relationship, or terminate the service relationship, 
   and after considering the circumstances of the case, a decision 
   is made that the school may not appoint, employ, enter into a 
   contract with, or engage the services of the individual for a 
   period of one to four years.
A person involved in any circumstances referred to in Subparagraph 1 
of the previous paragraph apply, any school at any level is not 
permitted to appoint, employ, enter into a contract with, or engage 
the services of that person. If such a person has already been 
appointed, employed, entered into a contract with, or had their 
services engaged, the school shall revoke the appointment, discharge 
the person from employment, terminate the contractual relationship,
or terminate the service relationship, as applicable. The same
shall apply in the case of a person involved in any circumstances 
described in Subparagraph 2 of the previous paragraph and a period 
of between one and four years has been formally decided on, during 
which time a school is not permitted to employ, appoint, enter into 
a contract with, or engage the services of that person.
If the gender equity education committee of a school has 
investigated and verified that a personnel member to whom the 
dismissal from employment, revocation of appointment, or 
termination of a contractual or service relationship referred to 
in the provisions of Paragraph 1 do not apply has committed sexual 
assault, or in cases of sexual harassment, sexual bullying, or 
sex- or gender-related behavior by a principal or faculty member 
that violates professional ethical standards and warrants a 
lifetime ban on appointment, employment, contractual relationships, 
or service relationships, or behavior in violation of the Child and 
Youth Sexual Transaction Prevention Act or the Child and Youth 
Sexual Exploitation Prevention Act, then appointment of, employment 
of, contractual relationships with, and service relationships with 
that person are not permitted. If the person has already been 
appointed or employed, or if a contractual or service relationship 
exists with the person, the school shall revoke the appointment, 
dismiss the person, terminate the contract, or terminate the service 
relationship, as applicable. The same shall apply if the school's 
gender equity education committee has investigated and verified sexual 
harassment, sexual bullying, sex- or gender-related behavior by a 
principal or faculty member that violates professional ethical 
standards, violations of the Act for the Prevention and Control of 
Child and Youth Sexual Exploitation, or violations of the Act for 
the Prevention and Control of Child and Youth Prostitution that 
does not warrant a lifetime ban on appointment, employment, 
contractual relationships, or service relationships and has 
formally decided on a period of between one and four years, 
during which time a school is not permitted to appoint, employ, 
enter into a contract with, or engage the services of that person.

Article 30
The competent authorities and schools of all levels shall undertake 
reporting, and collection and checking of information regarding any
persons to whom any of the circumstances referred to in the previous 
Article apply.
Before appointing or employing any educator, or entering into a 
contract with or engaging the services of any other person, a school 
shall, in accordance with the provisions of the Sexual Assault Crime 
Prevention Act, check whether or not the candidate has any record of 
criminal sexual assault, and in accordance with the regulations 
referred to in Paragraph 4, shall check whether the candidate has ever 
been implicated in sexual assault, sexual harassment, sexual bullying, 
or sex- or gender-related behavior by a principal or faculty member 
that violates professional ethical standards, or acted in violation 
of the Child and Youth Sexual Transaction Prevention Act or the Child 
and Youth Sexual Exploitation Prevention Act. Such checks shall be 
undertaken on a regular basis of persons already employed, appointed, 
entered into a contract with, or whose services are being engaged.
When assisting schools to undertake the checking referred to in the 
preceding Paragraph, the competent authorities at each level may use 
the database of persons who have been subject to an administrative 
penalty that was compiled by the central competent social welfare 
authority, in accordance with the provisions of the Child and Youth 
Sexual Exploitation Prevention Act, or Article 27 of the Sexual 
Harassment Prevention Act, as well as the database compiled by the 
central competent labor authority under the Act of Gender Equality 
in Employment of incidents related to sexual harassment prevention.
The regulations governing the reporting, and the collection, 
checking, handling, and use of information, and other related 
matters referred to in the previous three paragraphs shall be 
prescribed by the central competent authority.
The revocation of appointment, suspension of appointment, discharge 
from employment, permanent dismissal from employment, suspension of 
employment, or discharge from military service of personnel referred 
to in the previous Article to whom the Teachers' Act, the Act 
Governing the Appointment of Educators, relevant laws governing civil 
servants, or relevant laws governing military personnel are applicable 
shall be conducted in accordance with the applicable provisions of 
those laws, and the provisions of the previous four Paragraphs. In 
cases where dismissal, revocation of appointment, permanent dismissal 
from employment, or discharge from military service has not occurred, 
the person shall be transferred away from their current position at 
the school.
For any personnel member not referred to in the previous paragraph who 
has been involved in any of the circumstances referred to in 
Paragraph 1 or Paragraph 3 of the previous Article, during the 
investigation period the school or the competent authority shall 
order the person to be temporarily suspended from employment 
following a resolution by the gender equity education committee; if 
the reason(s) for the temporary suspension of employment ceases to 
exist and the person is reinstated, any salary that they were not 
paid during the suspension period shall be paid to the person in 
arrears in accordance with the provisions of relevant regulations.


Chapter 5 Application for Investigation and Remedy

Article 31
A victim of a gender-related incident on campus, his/her legal 
representative, or de facto custodian may apply for an 
investigation in writing to the school with which the offender 
is affiliated. However, when the offender is currently or was 
previously the principal of the school, the application shall 
be made to the school's competent authority.
Anyone with the knowledge of the events mentioned in the 
preceding Paragraph may report them to the school or competent 
authority according to prescribed procedures.
Schools and competent authorities shall not impose adverse 
sanctions or measures against a victim or any person who applies 
for an investigation, reports an incident, or assists others in 
applying for an investigation or reporting an incident.

Article 32
After receiving an application for investigation or a report 
of an offense, the school or competent authority shall notify 
the applicant, victim, or informant in writing within twenty 
days whether the application is accepted.
The school or competent authority shall reject the application 
or offense report if one of the following applies:
1. Events not prescribed in the regulations of this Act.
2. Applicants or informants who do not provide their real names.
3. A case that has already been handled and closed.
The notification in the preceding paragraph shall explain the reason 
of its rejection in writing.
The applicant, victim, or informant may submit a written request for 
reconsideration to the school or competent authority, specifying the 
grounds for reconsideration, if he/she does not receive notification 
of the application's disposition within the time limit specified in 
Paragraph 1 or may do so within twenty days from the day following 
receipt of notification that the application is rejected.

Article 33
After receiving an application or a report of an offense referred 
to in Paragraph 1 of the previous article, a school or competent 
authority shall delegate the matter to its gender equity education 
committee within three days to handle an investigation, except when 
the circumstances referred to in Paragraph 2 of the previous 
article apply.
When the gender equity education committee of a school or competent 
authority is handling an incident referred to in the previous 
Paragraph, it may set up an investigation team to investigate the 
matter; when necessary, some or all appointed members of the 
investigation team may be persons from outside the educational 
institution or competent authority. However, if the offender is a 
principal, teacher, staff member, or worker, an investigation team 
shall be established, and all of its members shall be external 
appointees. The investigation teams in which all appointed members 
are from outside the educational institution or competent authority 
and the completed investigation reports that occurred before the 
amendments to this Act takes effect on December 30, 2018, were legal.
Members of the investigation team shall have an awareness of gender 
equity, and the number of female members is not permitted to be fewer 
than half of the total number of members. At least one-third of any 
investigation team at the school level and at least one half of any 
investigation team at the competent authority level shall be experts 
or scholars with professional expertise in the investigation of 
gender-related incidents on campus. The qualifications required for 
members shall be determined by the central competent authority.
When the parties involved in a gender-related incident on campus 
belong to different schools, each investigation team specified in 
the previous Paragraph shall also include one or more representatives 
of the school with which the victim is affiliated. However, if the 
victim, his/her legal representative, or his/her de facto custodian 
requests that the school where the victim is currently enrolled not 
be notified, and the gender equity education committee determines 
that there is no need to make such notification, this requirement 
does not apply.
When a gender equity education committee or an investigation team 
carries out an investigation in accordance with the provisions of 
this Act the perpetrator, the applicant, and any person(s) who or 
unit(s) which have been asked to assist in the investigation shall
cooperate and provide pertinent information, and shall not evade, 
obstruct, or refuse.
Applicable provisions of the Administrative Procedure Law regarding 
jurisdiction, referral of cases, recusal, service of notifications, 
and amendments shall be applied in this Act or apply, mutatis mutandis.

Article 34
The handling of the investigation of a case by a gender equity 
education committee will not be affected by any judicial procedures
regarding the same case.
When investigating and handling a case, the gender equity education 
committee shall take into account the difference in power between 
the two parties.
When an investigation finds that an individual may have been 
involved in suspected gender-related incidents on campus at different
schools, the schools where the individual is currently employed and 
previously employed shall be notified of the timing and nature of 
the suspected incidents and cooperate in their investigation. The 
notified schools shall not refuse.
If the investigation finds that the same individual is involved in 
suspected gender-related incidents with different victims, these 
cases may be investigated together.

Article 35
If a school principal is involved in a gender-related incident 
on campus, and the gender equity education committee established 
by the school's competent authority deems it to be of a serious 
nature, requiring adjustment to or the suspension of the principal's 
duties during the investigation, the school's competent authority
may institute such an adjustment or suspension. However, if the 
principal holds a military position, the Act of Assignment for 
Officers and Noncommissioned Officers of the Armed Force and 
related regulations shall apply.
An individual who has been suspended from duties as stipulated 
in the preceding Paragraph may apply for reinstatement and to 
receive the base salary, seniority-based salary, or the equivalent 
renumeration for the period he/she has been suspended from duties 
in accordance with this Act or other relevant laws if the 
investigation does not conclude that the offense occurred, or if 
it concludes that the offense occurred but the suspension of duties,
dismissal from employment, termination of appointment, suspension 
of appointment, or non-renewal of appointment has not been carried
out in accordance with laws governing civil servants, educational 
personnel, or other relevant regulations.
Schools and competent authorities shall not accept retirement 
(military discharge) or severance applications from a principal 
or faculty member, civil servant, or member of the military 
employed or appointed by a school upon learning that he/she has 
been involved in a campus gender-related incident and lawfully 
subject to suspension of appointment, termination of appointment, 
non-renewal of appointment, referral for disciplinary action, or 
submission for review by the Control Yuan, or during a period of 
lawful suspension of duties or dismissal from employment.

Article 36
The Gender Equity Education Committee of the school or competent 
authority shall complete its investigation of a case within two 
months from the date the application or offense report is accepted.
 The investigation may be extended at most twice if necessary, 
and each extension may not exceed one-month’s time. The applicant, 
victim, informant, and offender shall be notified of the extension.
After the investigation is complete, the Gender Equity Education
Committee shall submit a written report to its school or competent 
authority regarding the investigation and suggestions for handling.
After receiving the aforesaid investigation report, the school or 
competent authority shall put forth a disposition or turn it over 
to the pertinent authority for a decision within two months 
according to this Act or pertinent laws or regulations. The school 
or competent authority shall notify in writing the applicant, 
victim, informant, and offender of its handling conclusion, facts 
established and grounds.
Before reaching the aforesaid conclusion, the school or competent 
authority may request representative(s) of its Gender Equity 
Education Committee to attend the meeting for clarification.

Article 37
If not agreeing with the conclusion referred to in Paragraph 3 
of the preceding Article, the applicant, victim, and offender 
may, within thirty days from the day following receipt of the 
written notification, submit a written request for reconsideration 
to the school or competent authority, specifying the grounds for 
reconsideration. However, if the offender is the principal, a 
teacher, staff member, or worker, the applicant or victim may 
make the request for reconsideration directly to the competent 
authority.
The aforesaid request for reconsideration may be made only once.
The school or competent authority may request that its gender 
equity education committee reinvestigate the case if, upon 
reconsideration of the original investigation's conclusion, the 
school or competent authority finds significant flaws in the 
investigative procedure, or identifies new facts or new evidence 
sufficient to affect the original investigation's determination. 
In the case of a request for reconsideration filed directly with 
the competent authority under the provisions of Paragraph 1, the 
reinvestigation shall be completed within forty days.
If, upon reconsideration conducted pursuant to the provisions of 
Paragraph 1, the competent authority determines that the 
conclusion reached by the school's investigation is unlawful or 
otherwise inappropriate, it may when necessary and in accordance 
with the recommendations of the gender equity education committee 
directly impose a remedy or specify the reasons for returning the 
matter to the school for handling in conformance with the law, 
and shall also hold responsible individuals accountable.

Article 38
After receiving request for reinvestigation from the school 
or competent authority, the Gender Equity Education Committee 
shall organize a new investigation team, whose investigation 
and handling procedures shall follow pertinent regulations 
prescribed by this Act.

Article 39
If not satisfied with the disposition of the reconsideration, 
the applicant, victim, or offender may petition for relief 
according to the following regulations within thirty days from 
the day following receipt of the written notification. However, 
if there are countervailing legal provisions, those provisions 
shall prevail:
1. School principals and teachers: regulations prescribed by the 
Teachers' Act or relevant laws and regulations shall apply.
2. Civil service employees in public schools who are hired 
according to the Civil Service Employment Act and employees 
hired before the effective date(May 3rd, 1985)of the Statute 
for Appointment of Educational Personnel: regulations prescribed 
by the Civil Servant Protection Act shall apply.
3. School students: petition the school with which they are 
affiliated in accordance with regulations.
The relief provided for in the preceding Paragraph may only be 
initiated after the decision on reconsideration has been rendered.

Article 40
When a school's competent authority investigates and handles 
gender-related incidents on campus, it shall provide the school 
with consultation services, counseling assistance, legal 
supervision, or corrective actions.
If the school's competent authority finds that the school's 
gender equity education committee has failed to convene 
meetings in accordance with the law, has convened meetings 
but has failed to review matters for which review is required, 
or its investigation has procedural or substantive flaws, or if 
there are legal uncertainties regarding the investigation's 
determinations, and such findings are made before completion of 
the school's reconsideration process, the competent authority 
shall specify the reasons and notify the school to address these 
matters in tandem with the reconsideration process. If such 
matters are not addressed in tandem with the reconsideration 
process or if a request for reconsideration is not made within 
the specified time period, the competent authority shall return 
the matters, specifying the grounds for doing so, to the school's 
gender equity education committee for review within a prescribed 
period.
After the competent authority returns the matters to the school's 
gender equity education committee for review pursuant to the 
preceding Paragraph, if the school's gender equity education 
committee fails to conduct a review in accordance with the law 
within the prescribed period or if the results of the review still 
raise concerns of illegality or impropriety, the competent authority 
may refer the matters directly to the gender equity education 
committee it has established, specifying the grounds for doing so, 
and this committee's determination shall be considered as equivalent 
to a determination by the school's gender equity education committee.
When the competent authority's review of the circumstances described 
in the preceding paragraph reaches a determination that the school 
is at fault, the competent authority shall include that determination 
as a factor in school evaluation, reduction of grants (subsidies), or 
administrative assessment, and shall also hold responsible individuals 
accountable.

Article 41
The school or competent authority shall establish facts relevant to 
cases prescribed by the Act according to the investigation report 
provided by its Gender Equity Education Committee.
The court shall consult the investigation reports provided by the 
Gender
Equity Education Committee at different levels in establishing 
facts referred to in the preceding paragraph.

Article 42
In cases where the offender involved in a gender-related incident 
on campus is a school principal, teacher, staff member, or worker, 
and the affected student suffers harm as a result of the incident, 
the offender shall be liable for compensatory damages.
Even if the harm described in the previous Paragraph does not 
involve a financial loss, the student may request monetary damages 
commensurate with the harm. In cases of reputational harm, the
student may request appropriate measures to restore his/her reputation.
In addition to liability for compensatory damages pursuant to 
the provisions of the previous two Paragraphs, a court may, if 
the victim so requests and depending on the severity of the offense, 
impose punitive damages ranging from one to three times the 
compensatory damages. If the offender is a school principal, the court 
may impose punitive damages ranging from three to five times the 
compensatory damages.


Chapter 6 Penal Provisions

Article 43
The principal or president, or a teacher, non-teaching staff member, 
or other worker at a school to whom any of the following 
circumstances apply is subject to a fine of not less than 30,000 New 
Taiwan Dollars and not more than 150,000 New Taiwan Dollars:
1. The person has violated, without reasonable grounds, the provisions 
of Paragraph 1 of Article 22 by failing to report the incident to 
personnel with administrative authority at the school or to the 
school's competent authority within 24 hours.
2. The person has violated Paragraph 2 of Article 22 by forging, 
altering, destroying, or concealing evidence pertaining to an 
incident of on-campus sexual harassment or sexual bullying perpetrated 
by some other person(s), or sex- or gender-related behavior by a 
principal or faculty member that violates professional ethical 
standards.
A school that acts in violation of the provisions of Paragraph 3 of 
Article 22, Paragraph 2 of Article 23, the latter part of Article 24, 
the proviso to Article 27, Paragraph 4 of Article 28, or Paragraph 3 
of Article 31 is subject to a fine of not less than 10,000 New Taiwan 
Dollars and not more than 150,000 New Taiwan Dollars; any other person 
working there who acts in violation of any of these provisions is also 
subject to such a fine.
A school in violation of the provisions of Article 13, Article 14, 
Article 15, Article 17, or Paragraph 2 of Article 21 is subject to a 
fine of not less than 10,000 New Taiwan Dollars and not more than 
100,000 New Taiwan Dollars.
If an offender violates Paragraph 6 of Article 26 by failing without 
reasonable grounds to comply with the implementation of the measures 
specified in the preamble, Subparagraph 2 and Subparagraph 3 of 
Paragraph 2, or violates Paragraph 5 of Article 33 by failing without 
reasonable grounds to cooperate with the investigation specified there, 
the school shall report the matter to the competent authority and 
request that it impose a fine of not less than 10,000 New Taiwan Dollars 
and not more than 50,000 New Taiwan Dollars, and a separate fine may be 
imposed for each instance of a violation until the offender complies or 
provides relevant information. When, however, the offender is the 
principal or president of the school, the fine shall be directly imposed
by the competent authority.
If the principal or president of a school or a member of the board of 
directors of a school endowment corporation has been negligent in 
exercising their duties with the result that the school has not, in 
accordance with the provisions of Paragraph 1, the preamble, 
Subparagraph 2 and Subparagraph 3 of Paragraph 2, or Paragraph 6 of 
Article 26, taken disciplinary action or measures against an offender 
other than those specified in Subparagraph 1 of Paragraph 2 of 
Article 26, or has not taken measures necessary to ensure the 
offender's full cooperation and compliance, the principal or president
or the board member is subject to a fine of not less than 10,000 New 
Taiwan Dollars and not more than 50,000 New Taiwan Dollars.

Article 44
A principal, teacher, staff member, or worker of a school who 
violates the regulations on reporting suspected incidents of 
sexual assault on campus described in Paragraph 1 of Article 
22 when such a violation results in a further incident of sexual 
assault on campus, or who falsifies, alters, destroys, or conceals 
evidence of sexual assault on campus committed by others shall, 
if the evidence has been verified by the school or relevant 
authorities to be accurate, be subject to dismissal, discharge 
from employment, termination of contractual relationship, or 
termination of service relationship in accordance with the law.
A principal, teacher, staff member, or worker of a school who 
falsifies, alters, destroys, or conceals evidence of on-campus 
sexual harassment or sexual bullying committed by others, or of 
sex- or gender-related behavior by a principal or faculty member 
that violates professional ethical standards shall, upon 
verification by the school or relevant authorities that such 
actions have taken place, be subject to dismissal, discharge from 
employment, termination of contractual relationship, or termination 
of service relationship as required by relevant regulations.
The school or competent authority shall report any individual who 
violates the provisions described in the previous two Paragraphs 
in accordance with the law.


Chapter 7 Supplementary Provisions

Article 45
The provisions of Article 10, Article 25, and Article 26 of the 
Sexual Harassment Prevention Act shall apply to gender-related 
incidents on campus as defined in this Act.

Article 46
All gender-related incidents on campus that were already under 
review but whose review had not reached a determination prior to 
the effective date of the amendments to this Act on [date], 
as well as incidents that occurred before the amendments came 
into effect and were subsequently taken up after the amendments 
came into effect, shall be concluded in accordance with the 
provisions in effect after the amendments. However, the validity 
of procedures that have already been initiated shall not be affected.

Article 47
Enforcement Rules for this Act shall be drawn by the central 
competent authority.

Article 48
This Act will take effect as of the date of promulgation, except 
for the provisions of Paragraph 2 of Article 2, Subparagraph 2 and 
Item 4 of Subparagraph 3 of Article 3, Paragraph 2 of Article 5, 
Articles 7 through 9, Article 21, Article 29, Article 30, proviso 
to the former part of Paragraph 2 and Paragraph 3 of Article 33,
 Article 37, Article 40, and Article 44, which will take effect 
on March 8, 2024.