Sexual harassment is any form of unwelcome sexual behaviour thats
offensive, humiliating or intimidating. Most importantly, its against the
law. Sexual Harassment is intimidation, bullying or coercion of a sexual
nature, or the unwelcome or inappropriate promise of rewards in exchange for
sexual favours.
In some contexts or circumstances, sexual Harassment may be illegal. It
includes a range of behaviour from seemingly mild transgressions and
annoyances to actual sexual abuse or sexual assault.
Sexual Harassment is a form of illegal employment discrimination in many
countries, and is a form of abuse (sexual and psychological) and bullying.
For many businesses, preventing sexual harassment, and defending employees
from sexual harassment charges has become key goals of legal
decision-making. In contrast, many scholars complain that sexual harassment
in education remains a forgotten secret, with educators and administrators
refusing to admit the problem exist in their schools, or accept their legal
and ethical responsibilities to deal with it.
Early history of the use of the term: sexual harassment was used in 1973 by
Dr. Mary Rowe in a report to the then President and Chancellor of MIT about
various forms of gender issues {1}. Rowe has stated that she believes she
was not the first to use the term, since sexual harassment was being
discussed in womens groups in Massachusetts in the early 1970, but that MIT
may have been the first or one of the first large organizations to discuss
the topic (in the MIT Academic Council), and to develop relevant policies
and procedures. MIT at the time also recognized the injuries caused by
racial harassment and the harassment of women of colour which may be both
racial and sexual. The President of MIT also stated that harassment (and
favouritism) is antithetical to the mission of a university as well as
intolerable for individuals.
In the book In Our Times: Memoir of a Revolution (1999) journalist Susan
Brownmiller quotes the Cornell activists who in 1975 thought they had
coined the term sexual harassment: Eight of us were sitting in an office
brainstorming about what we were going to write on posters for our
speak-out.
We were referring to it as
sexual intimidation,
sexual coercion,
sexual exploitation on the job. None of those names seemed quite
right. We wanted something that embraced a whole range of subtitle and
un-subtitle persistent behaviors. Somebody came up with harassment.
Sexual harassment instantly we agreed. Thats what it was {2}.
These activists, Lin Farley, Susan Meyer, and Karen Sauvigne went on to form
Working Womens Institute which, along with the Alliance against Sexual
Coercion, founded in 1976 by Freada Klein, Lynn Wehrli, and Elizabeth Cohn-Stuntz,
were among the pioneer organizations to bring sexual harassment to public
attention in the late 1970.
Harassment situations: Â Sexual harassment can occur in a variety of
circumstances. Often, but not always, the harasser is in a position of power
or authority over the victim (due to differences in age, or social,
political, educational or employment relationships).
Forms of harassment relationships include:
- The victim does not have to be the person directly harassed but can
be anyone who finds the behavior offensive and is affected by it.
- While adverse effects on the victim are common, this does not have
to be the case for the behavior to be unlawful.
- The victim can be any gender. The harasser can be any gender.
- The harasser does not have to be of the opposite sex.
- The harasser may be completely unaware that his or her behavior is
offensive or constitutes sexual harassment or may be completely unaware
that his or her actions could be unlawful.
Misunderstanding between Female:Â Â It can result from a situation
where one thinks he/she is making themselves clear, but is not understood
the way they intended. The misunderstanding can either be reasonable or
unreasonable. An example of unreasonable is when a man holds a certain
stereotypical view of a woman such that he did not understand the womans
explicit message to stop.
Varied behaviours:Â One of the difficulties in understanding sexual
harassment is that it involves a range of behavior and is often difficult
for the recipient to describe to themselves, and to others, exactly what
they are experiencing. Moreover, behavior and motives vary between
individual harassers.
Behavioral classes:Â Dzeich et al has divided harassers into two broad
classes:
- Public harassers are flagrant in their seductive or sexist attitudes
towards colleagues, subordinates, students, etc.
- Private harassers carefully cultivate a restrained and respectable
image on the surface, but when alone with their target, their demeanor
changes.
Langelan describes three different classes of harassers:
- Predatory harasser: who gets sexual thrills from humiliating others?
This harasser may become involved in sexual extortion, and may
frequently harass just to see how targets respond. Those who dont resist
may even become targets for rape.
- Dominance harasser: Â the most common type, who engages in harassing
behaviour as an ego boost, strategic or territorial harassers who seek
to maintain privilege in jobs or physical locations, for example a mans
harassing female employees in a predominantly male occupation.
Types of harassment
There is often more than one type of harassing behavior present, so a single
harasser may fit more than one category.
These are brief summations of each type:
- Power-player: Legally termed quid pro quo harassment, these
harassers insist on sexual favors in exchange for benefits they can
dispense because of their positions in hierarchies: getting or keeping a
job, favorable grades, recommendations, credentials, projects,
promotion, orders, and other types of opportunities.
Â
- Mother/Father Figure: These harassers will try to create mentor-like
relationships with their targets, all the while masking their sexual
intentions with pretenses towards personal, professional, or academic
attention.
Â
- Â One-of-the-Gang: Harassment occurs when groups of men or women
embarrass others with low comments, physical evaluations, or other
unwanted sexual attention. Harassers may act individually in order to
belong or impress the others, or groups may gang up on a particular
target.
Â
- Serial Harasser:Â Harassers of this type carefully build up an image
so that people would find it hard to believe they would do anyone any
harm. They plan their approaches carefully, and strike in private so
that it is their word against that of their victims.
Â
- Groper Whenever the opportunity presents itself, these harasser eyes
and hands begin to wander, engaging in unwanted physical contact that
may start innocuous but lead to worse.
Â
- Opportunist: Opportunist use physical settings and circumstances, or
infrequently occurring opportunities, to mask premeditated or
intentional sexual behavior towards targets. This will often involve
changing the environment in order to minimize inhibitory effects of the
workplace or school or taking advantage of physical tasks to
accidentally grope a target.
Â
- Bully:Â In this case, a harasser uses physical threats to frighten
and separate two would be lovers who will fully are engaging with each
other. The intent of the harasser can be due to a range of reasons such
as jealousy, racism, or their own hidden sexual agendas. Normally the
harasser attempts to physically separate the two using their size or
threats of physical violence and remains until they are satisfied by the
separation or can pursue their own sexual agenda against one of the
victims.
Â
- Confidante:Â Harassers of this type approach subordinates, or
students, as equals or friends, sharing about their own life experiences
and difficulties, sharing stories to win admiration and sympathy, and
inviting subordinates to share theirs so as to make them feel valued and
trusted. Soon these relationships move into an intimate domain.
Situational Harasser Harassing behavior begins when the perpetrator
endures a traumatic event (psychological), or begins to experience very
stressful life situations, such as psychological or medical problems,
marital problems, or divorce. The harassment will usually stop if the
situation changes or the pressures are removed.
Â
- Pest: This is the stereotypical wont take no for an answer
harasser who persists in hounding a target for attention and dates even
after persistent rejections. This behavior is usually misguided, with no
malicious intent.
Â
- Great Gallant: This mostly verbal harassment involves excessive
compliments and personal comments that focus on appearance and gender,
and are out of place or embarrassing to the recipient.
Â
- Intellectual Seducer: Most often found in educational settings,
these harassers will try to use their knowledge and skills as an avenue
to gain access to students, or information about students, for sexual
purposes. They may require students participate in exercises or
studies that reveal information about their sexual experiences,
preferences, and habits.
Â
- Incompetent:Â These are individuals who desire the attentions of
their targets, who do not reciprocate these feelings. They may display a
sense of entitlement, believing their targets should feel flattered by
their attentions. When rejected, this type of harasser may use bullying
methods as a form of revenge.
Â
- Stalking:Â Persistent watching, following, contacting or observing of
an individual, sometimes motivated by what the stalker believes to be
love, or by sexual obsession, or by anger and hostility.
- Unintentional:Â Acts or comments of a sexual nature, not intended to
harass, can constitute sexual harassment if another person feels
uncomfortable with such subjects.
Â
- Sexualized environments:Â Sexualized environments are environments
where Obscenities, sexual joking, sexually explicit graffiti, viewing
Internet pornography, sexually degrading posters and objects, etc., are
common. None of these behaviors or objects may necessarily be directed
at anyone in particular or intended as harassment. However, they can
create an offensive environment, and one that is consistent with
hostile environment sexual harassment.
Â
- Rituals and initiations: Sexual harassment can also occur in group
settings as part of rituals or ceremonies, such as when members engage
newcomers in abusive or sexually explicit rites as part of hazing or
initiation. While such traditions have historically remained in arenas
of male bonding or female bonding, such as team sports, fraternities,
and sororities, it is becoming increasingly common for girls/women
groups to engage in similar ceremonies.
Â
- Retaliation and backlash: Retaliation and backlash against a victim
are very common, particularly a complainant. Victims who speak out
against sexual harassment are often labeled troublemakers who are on
their own power trips, or who are looking for attention. Similar to
cases of rape or sexual assault, the victim often becomes the accused,
with their appearance, private life and character likely to fall under
intrusive scrutiny and attack. They risk hostility and isolation from
colleagues, supervisors, teachers, fellow students, and even friends.
They may become the targets of mobbing or relational aggression.
Women are not necessarily sympathetic to female complainants who have
been sexually harassed. If the harasser was male, internalized sexism,
and/or jealousy over the sexual attention towards the victim, may encourage
some women to react with as much hostility towards the complainant as some
male colleagues. Fear of being targeted for harassment or retaliation
themselves may also cause some women to respond with hostility.
For example, ' when Lois Jenson filed her lawsuit against Evelcth
Taconite Co., the women placed a hangmans noose above her workplace, and
shunnedher both at work and in the community many of these women later
joined her suit (Bingham et al. 2002) Women may even project hostility onto
the victim in order to bond with their male coworkers and build trust.
Retaliation has occurred when a sexual harassment victim suffers a negative
action as a result of the harassment. For example, a complainant be given
poor evaluations or low grades, have their projects sabotaged, be denied
work or academic opportunities, have their work hours out back, and other
actions against them which undermine their productivity, or their ability to
advance at work or school.
They may be suspended, asked to resign, or be fired from their jobs
altogether. Moreover, a professor or employer accused of sexual harassment,
or who is the colleague of a perpetrator, can use their power to see that a
victim is never hired again, or never accepted to another school.
Retaliation can even involve further sexual harassment, and also stalking
and cyber stalking of the victim. Of the women who have approached her to
share their own experiences of being sexually harassed by their teachers,
feminist and writer Naomi Wolf writes"
I am ashamed of what I tell them, that they should indeed worry about
making an accusation because what they fear is likely to come true. Not one
of the women I have heard from had an outcome that was not worse for her
than silence. One, I recall, was drummed out of the school by peer pressure.
Many faced bureaucratic stonewalling. Some women said they lost their
academic status as golden girls overnight; grants dried up, letters of
recommendation were no longer forthcoming.
No one was met with a coherent process that was not weighted against them.
Usually, the key decision-makers in the college or university especially if it
was a private university-joined forces to, in effect, collude with the faculty
member accused; to protect not him necessarily but the reputation of the
university, and to keep information from surfacing in a way that could protect
other women. The goal seemed to be not to provide a balanced forum, but damage
control.
Another woman who was interviewed by Helen Watson, a sociologist, reported
that Facing up to the crime and having to deal with it in public is probably
worse than suffering in silence. I found it to be a lot worse than the
harassment itself.
Effects of sexual harassment and the (often) accompanying
retaliation:Â Effects of sexual harassment can vary depending on the
individual, and the severity and duration of the harassment. Often, sexual
harassment incidents fall into the category of the merely annoying.
However, many situations can, and do, have life-altering effects
particularly when they involve severe/chronic abuses, and/or retaliation
against a victim who does not submit to the harassment, or who complains
about it openly. Indeed, psychologists and social workers report that
severe/chronic sexual harassment can have the same psychological effects as
rape or sexual assault. (Koss, 1987)
For example, in 1995, Judith Coflin committed suicide after chronic sexual
harassment by her bosses and coworkers. (Her family was later awarded 6
million dollars in punitive and compensatory damages.) Backlash and victim
blaming can further aggravate the effects. Moreover, every year, sexual
harassment costs hundreds of millions of dollars in lost educational and
professional opportunities, mostly for girls and women.
Common effects on the victims:Â Â Common professional, academic, financial,
and social effects of sexual harassment:
- Decreased work or school performance; increased absenteeism.
- Loss of job or career, loss of income.
- Having to drop courses, change academic plans, or leave school (loss
of tuition).
- Having ones personal life offered up for public scrutiny-the Victim
becomes the accused, and his or her dress, lifestyle, and private
life will often come under attack.
- Being objectified and humiliated by scrutiny and gossip.
- Becoming publicly sexualized (i.e. groups of people evaluate the
victim to establish if he or she is worth the sexual attention or the
risk to the harassers career).
- Defamation of character and reputation.
- Loss of trust in environments similar to where the harassment
occurred.
- Loss of trust in the types of people that occupy similar positions
as the harasser or his or her colleagues.
- Extreme stress upon relationships with significant others, sometimes
resulting in divorce; extreme stress on peer relationships, or
relationships with colleagues.
- Weakening of support network, or being ostracized from professional
or academic circles (friends, colleagues, or family may distance them
from the victim, or shun him or her altogether).
- Having to relocate to another city, another job, or another school.
Loss of references/recommendations.
Some of the psychological and health effects that can occur in someone who
has been sexually harassed, depression, anxiety and/or panic attacks,
sleeplessness and nightmares, shame and guilt, difficulty concentrating,
headaches, fatigue or loss of motivation, stomach problems, eating disorders
(weight loss or gain), alcoholism, feeling betrayed and/or violated, feeling
angry or violent towards the perpetrator, feeling powerless or out of
control, increased blood pressure, loss of confidence and self esteem,
withdrawal and isolation, overall loss of trust in people, traumatic stress,
post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), complex post-traumatic stress
disorder, suicidal thoughts or attempts, suicide.
Effects of sexual harassment on organizations
- Decreased productivity and increased team conflict.
- Decrease in success at meeting financial goals (because of team
conflict).
- Decreased job satisfaction.
- Loss of staff and expertise from resignations to avoid harassment or
resignations/ firings of alleged harassers; loss of students who leave
school to avoid harassment.
- Decreased productivity and/or increased absenteeism by staff or
students experiencing harassment.
- Increased health care costs and sick pay costs because of the health
consequences of harassment.
- The knowledge that harassment is permitted can undermine ethical
standards and discipline in the organization in general, as staff and/or
students lose respect for, and trust in, their seniors who indulge in,
or turn a blind eye to, sexual harassment.
- If the problem is ignored, a companys or schools image can suffer.
- Legal costs if the problem is ignored and complainants take the
issue to court.
Evolution of sexual harassment law:
the case of
Vishaka v. State of Rajasthan {3} in 1997 has been
credited with establishing sexual harassment as illegal. In Israel, the 1988
Equal Employment Opportunity Law made it a crime for an employer to
retaliate against an employee who had rejected sexual advances, but it wasnt
until 1998 that the Israeli Sexual Harassment Law made such behavior illegal
.
In May 2002, the European Union Council and Parliament amended a 1976
Council Directive on the equal treatment of men and women in employment to
prohibit sexual harassment in the workplace, naming it a form of sex
discrimination and violation of dignity. This Directive required all Member
States of the European Union to adopt laws on sexual harassment, or amend
existing laws to comply with the Directive by October 2005.
In 2005, China added new provisions to the Law on Womens Right Protection to
include sexual harassment. In 2006 The Shanghai Supplement was drafted to
help further define sexual harassment in China.
Varied legal guidelines and definitions: The United Nations General
Recommendation 19 to the Convention on the Elimination of all Forms of
Discrimination Against Women defines sexual harassment of women to include:
such unwelcome sexually determined behavior as physical contact and
advances, sexually colored remarks, showing pornography and sexual demands,
whether by words or actions. Such conduct can be humiliating and may constitute
a health and safety problem; it is discriminatory when the woman has reasonable
ground to believe that her objection would disadvantage her in connection with
her employment, including recruitment or promotion, or when it creates a hostile
working environment.
While such conduct can be harassment of women by men, many laws around the
world which prohibit sexual harassment recognize that both men and women may
be harassers or victims of sexual harassment. However, most claims of sexual
harassment are made by women. There are many similarities, and also
important differences in laws and definitions used around the world. After
covering one country in some detail (the United States), approaches in other
countries are covered alphabetically.
United States: There are a number of legal options for a complainant in the
U.S. mediation, filing with the EEOC or filing a claim under a state Fair
Employment Practices (FEP) statute (both are for workplace sexual
harassment), filing a common law tort, etc. Not all sexual harassment will
be considered severe enough to form the basis for a legal claim.
However, most often there are several types of harassing behaviors present,
and there is no minimum level for harassing conduct under the law. Many more
experienced sexual harassment than have a solid legal case against the
accused. Because of this, and the common preference for settling, few cases
ever make it to federal court.
India:Â Sexual harassment in India is termed
Eve Teasing and is
described as: unwelcome sexual gesture or behaviour whether directly or
indirectly as sexually coloured remarks; physical contact and advances;
showing pornography; a demand or request for sexual favours; any other
unwelcome physical, verbal/non-verbal conduct being sexual in nature. The
critical factor is the unwelcomeness of the behaviour, thereby making the
impact of such actions on the recipient more relevant rather than intent of
the perpetrator.
According to Indias constitution, sexual harassment infringes the
fundamental right of a woman to gender equality under Article 14 of the
Constitution of India and her right to life and live with dignity under
Article 21 of the Constitution.
Many provisions in other legislation protect against sexual harassment at
workplace, such as Section 354, IPC deals with assault or criminal force to
a woman with the intent to outrage her modesty, and Section 509, IPC deals
with word, gesture or act intended to insult the modesty of a woman. But In
India, until the landmark decision in
Vishaka Case was delivered,
there was as such no law or rule that specifically addressed the heinous
issue of sexual harassment of women at workplace.
Based on this case, the Indian Supreme Court laid out guidelines (commonly
known as the
Vishaka Guidelines) which makes it mandatory for all the
employers to provide an effective mechanism to ensure that the right to
gender equality of working women will not get obstructed in their
organizations.
Further, this case has strongly grounded the argument that each incident of
sexual harassment of women at workplace is the violation of human rights
and additionally paved the way for legislation on sexual harassment of women
at workplace in India.
The Protection of Women against Sexual Harassment at Workplace Bill, 2010
has been passed in India with an aim to define sexual harassment in a more
explicit manner and create a mechanism for the redressal of complaints.
Further, Sexual Harassment of Women at Workplace (Prevention, Prohibition
and Redressal) Act, 2013 has been passed to elucidate that which types of
acts are contemplated under the umbrella of sexual harassment and how
organizations can take proactive measures to ensure the safety and dignity
of women at workplace.
According to Sexual Harassment of Women at Workplace: (Prevention,
Prohibition and Redressal) Act, 2013:
Section 3(1): No woman shall be subjected to sexual harassment at any
workplace.
Section 19(a): Every employer shall provide a safe working
environment at the workplace which shall include safety from the persons
coming into contact at the workplace.{4}
Another significant legal provision that was brought by the Indian State in
force isÂ
The Criminal Law (Amendment) Act, 2013. The Act came into
force on 3rd February, 2013, following the outrage of the entire nation
behind the ghastly incident of Delhi rape case, widely known as the Nirbhaya
Case. This Act has introduced significant changes in the provisions under
Indian Penal Code and expressly recognized certain acts as offences
including sexual harassment, which is punishable up to three years of
imprisonment or fine or both under Section 354-A.
As well, passing sexually coloured commentaries also amounts to
sexual harassment, thereby making this a crime which is punishable up to one
year of imprisonment or fine or both. According to the Indian Constitution,
any act of sexual harassment intrudes as well as rescinds the
fundamental right of a woman to gender equality under Article 14 and also
her right to life and live with dignity under Article 21.
Â
Reference:
- Flavia Agnes, Violence Against Women: Review of Recent Enactments.
In Swapna Mukhopadhyay, In the Name of Justice: Women and Law in
Society. Manohar, Delhi,1988, pp. 81-116
- Upendra Baxi, The Avatars of Indian Judicial Activism: Explorations
in the Geographies of [In]Justice. In S.K. Verma and Kusum (eds.), Fifty
Years of the Supreme Court of India: Its Grasp and Reach. Oxford
University Press, New Delhi, 2000, pp. 156-209
- Nivedita Menon, Embodying the Self: Feminism, Sexual Violence and
the Law. In Partha Chatterjee and Pradeep Jaganathan (eds.), Community,
Gender and Violence. Subaltern Studies XI. Permanent Black, New Delhi,
2000, pp. 66-105
- Ratna Kapur and Shomona Khanna, Memorandum on the Reform of Laws
Relating to Sexual Offences. Centre for Legal Research, Delhi, 1996
- Saheli, Another Occupational Hazard: Sexual Harassment and the
Working Woman. Saheli Womens Resource Centre, New Delhi, 1998
- Shobna Saxena, Crimes against Women and Protective Laws. Deep and
Deep, New Delhi, 1995
- Ashley Tellis, Resisting Feminism, Indian Journal of Gender
Studies 8(1), 2001
- https://au.reachout.com/articles/what-is-sexual-harassment
- Adapted from Back Off! How to Confront and Stop Sexual Harassment
and Harassers by, Martha.Langelan. http://hrlibrary.umn.edu/svaw/harassment/explore/1whatis.htm.
- D. D. Basu (1994). Introduction to the Constitution of India.16th
ed. New Delhi: Prentice Hall of India.
End Notes:
- Saturns Rings, 1974.
- Our Times: Memoir of a Revolution (1999)P-281
- (1997) 6 SCC 241, AIR 1997 SC 3011
- Sexual Harassment of Women at Workplace: (Prevention, Prohibition
and Redressal) Act,2013
Please Drop Your Comments