TITLE:
Research on the Imputation Mechanism in Injury Accidents Involving Chinese College Students
AUTHORS:
Deqi Yang
KEYWORDS:
Guardianship, Student Injury Accident, Fault Liability
JOURNAL NAME:
Open Journal of Applied Sciences,
Vol.16 No.2,
February
2,
2026
ABSTRACT: Chinese universities generally adopt a “closed” management model. If a student suffers an injury accident, regardless of the cause, the student’s parents will generally pursue the school for civil liability for compensation, and universities often provide compensation. This phenomenon is not in accordance with legal provisions. University students are fully capable of civil conduct, and the relationship between universities and students is neither a “guardianship” relationship nor a “entrusted guardianship” relationship, but a “entrusted education and management” relationship, which is theoretically a contractual legal relationship. In this legal relationship, universities have the obligation to educate, manage, and ensure the safety of students. If a student suffers an injury accident during their time at school, the principle of “fault liability” in civil law should be applied, rather than the principle of “presumption of fault” for persons without civil capacity. The concept of holding universities liable for “no-fault” liability has no legal basis and is also unfair. Universities only bear corresponding legal responsibility based on fault if they fail to fulfill their corresponding education and management obligations and safety guarantee obligations. If a student suffers an injury accident due to their own fault, the fault of a third party, or force majeure, and the university has fulfilled its relevant obligations, it does not need to bear legal responsibility.