<p>You will rarely find a university that condones hazing. If the school has a Greek system, they have a no-hazing policy. However, most (social at least) Greek organizations typically do at least a little, especially frats. It’s pretty sad but it is deeply, deeply ingrained in the culture. They also manage to keep it extremely quiet as well, so problems are rarely reported unless someone dies or something. It makes it seem less common, but it is VERY, VERY common, especially at bigger schools with competitive Greek systems.</p>
<p>I used to be in a sorority that once (a few years ago) was almost kicked off campus for hazing - they turned it down a lot, and you could say they “didn’t haze,” but there were definitely elements of the pledge process that were questionable. If you asked the actives if they hazed us, they would probably say no, and they wouldn’t think they were lying. The line can be blurry sometimes, even if it seems clear-cut if you aren’t part of the system.</p>
<p>I don’t know if we’re allowed to post links on here, but look at hazedandconfused.com. With the number of stories on there (sure, some are fake of course, but they can’t all be) you can see how widespread hazing really is.</p>