Whether to live together is a matter of rights, and whether to live together is a matter of will.
Montesquieu said: Freedom is the right to do everything permitted by law.
On March 29th, 2005, the Ministry of Education promulgated the Education Law of the People's Republic of China < Regulations on the Management of Students in Colleges and Universities >: > The original regulation that "if a student marries without going through the formalities of dropping out of school while studying at school, it will be treated as dropping out of school" was abolished, and there is no regulation on whether a college student can get married. The law has no objection to college students' marriage, let alone cohabitation.
College students are all adults (excluding special groups) and have full criminal and civil responsibilities. Cohabitation is personal freedom.
If I am an opponent: the abolition of this provision only improves the rights of individuals, and the purpose of the whole law is to promote higher education, which is the basic premise. So whether you can live together depends on whether it affects the normal teaching system and personal studies. This power is given to schools, and the Ministry of Education will certainly not object. In fact, the "legitimacy" of college cohabitation is not actively given, but caused by the two sides of things. Only a fool can refute it from a practical point of view.