Men accounted for 15.4 percent of
the 12,025 sexual-harassment charges filed with the Equal Employment Opportunity
Commission in 2006. That's a new record.
While sexual-harassment charges
have steadily declined since 2000--dropping from 15,836 to 12,025 in 2006--men
account for an increasingly large share of complainants. In 1997, men comprised
11.6 percent of such complainants. The EEOC
doesn't track aggressors' gender, but independent research indicates most of the
aggressors are male, according to Gender Public Advocacy Coalition (GenderPAC).
What explains this trend? "Locker-room bullying that enforces codes of
masculinity on the job continues to create hostile workplaces," Riki Wilchins,
GenderPAC executive director, said in a statement.
"As more male employees realize such behavior is now actionable, they are filing
suit."
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What's Going
On?
Title VII of
the Civil Rights Act of 1964 guards against discrimination on the basis of race,
gender, religion and national origin, but it includes no protection on the basis
of orientation or gender identity or expression.
Gender identity is one's gender
self-concept--whether one perceives oneself as a woman or a man. There may be no
outward indications of this. This typically is considered a protection for
transgender employees. Progressive companies include gender identity and
expression in their nondiscrimination statements. To date, 85 Fortune 500
corporations do this, including 14 companies in The 2006 DiversityInc Top 50
Companies for Diversity®, according to the Human Rights Campaign. The
2007 Top 50 survey includes a question about gender identity. Results will be
announced March 21. Click
here to sign up for the live web cast of the
announcement.
Gender expression is an observable phenomenon--how
one "expresses" one's gender through speech, mannerisms, clothing, grooming and
behavior. For example, a woman may be denied advancement because she is
perceived as "too aggressive," or a male employee may be mocked by his coworkers
for keeping his fingernails manicured. Anyone--orientation regardless--who fails
to conform to traditional social norms regarding masculinity and femininity may
be subject to harassment based on his or her gender expression.
In March 1998, the Supreme Court
set precedent in anti-harassment law when it ruled in favor of Joseph Oncale, an
employee with Sundowner Offshore Services, who alleged he was sexually harassed
in the basis of gender. Oncale claimed two supervisors and a third employee
mocked him for being slender, blond, long-haired and wearing an earring and
threatened him with rape. He complained to his employer to no avail and
ultimately quit. The court said male-on-male harassment may violate Title
VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964.
What else did it find?
·
Title
VII protects both men and women
·
Harassment need not be motivated
by "sexual desire" to constitute discrimination on the basis of gender
·
Harassment must be so "objectively
offensive" as to create a hostile working environment for the victim
·
Same-sex harassment guidelines
also apply if the alleged victim is gay or lesbian. In 2001, the 9th Circuit
Court found Azteca Restaurant Enterprises liable for discrimination against a
gay-male employee, whose coworkers addressed him using feminine pronouns and
mocked him for "walking like a woman"
·
Title
VII does not include provisions protecting against all forms of discrimination,
such as same-sex harassment
"The federal
government and the EEOC are woefully behind corporate
America and many state
governments in setting policies that protect employees, regardless of whether
they fit expectations for masculinity or femininity," said Wilchins.
Discrimination based on gender
stereotyping is illegal in 23 states, including
California,
Ohio,
New
York and
Michigan, and 70 cities also have passed
legislation to that effect. To learn more, read GenderPAC's Workplace
Fairness report.
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