Sexual
harassment is a form of sexual discrimination and violates federal and state
law. According to Tufts University, sexual harassment is defined to include but
is not limited to “submission to such conduct is made explicitly or implicitly
a term and condition of an individual’s employment or academic status; or
submission to, or rejection of, such conduct by an individual is used as a
basis for employment or academic decisions affecting him or her; or such
conduct, whether verbal or physical, has the purpose or effect of unreasonably
interfering with the individual’s work or academic performance or of creating
an intimidating, hostile, or offensive environment in which to work or to learn
(Barnet 598, 599). While laws and
definitions may vary regarding the treatment of harassment cases, the facts are
harassment is clearly wrong remains and the difference between it and flirtation
is murky at best.
Sexual
conduct itself does not create a sexually hostile environment; it can be
created by a single severe incident or several incidents such as cornering a
student and touching him or her in a sexual manner with the perpetrators
laughing it off as if nothing had happened, name-calling, and leaving lewd
telephone messages. When the environment becomes hostile, the victim feels
helpless because he or she has been violated yet nothing could be done. As a
result, performance in the workplace or classroom can be adversely affected.
Other factors include: the nature of the conduct, how often the conduct
occurred and how long it continued, the age and sex of the victim, whether or
not the harasser was in a position of position of power over the victim submitted to the harassment, the
number of the alleged harassers, the age of the harasser(s), and other
incidents of sexual harassment involving both parties (ED/OCR 4).
In
spite of it all, some harassment cases are merely flirtation incidents gone
awry while others are indeed harassment cases. For example, the six-year boy
who kisses a female classmate on the playground takes the kiss as something
innocent whereas our adult minds would attempt to classify it as harassment and
inevitably, the boy is labeled as a harasser! The only thing that was wrong
with the situation is kiss was at school, not in the neighborhood or at a
family get-together. Also, most fast-food restaurant workers, male and female,
consider themselves family and are apt to use colorful language, tell Chris
Rock jokes, and flirt with each other on a regular basis and it is all in the
name of good fun and relieving the stress level. To someone outside of the
normal conversation, it would be considered sexual harassment because he or she
would not understand the context the words were taken in. At the restaurant, if
a new employee would complain about the behavior of the cooks and his or her
coworkers, he or she would have to talk with the manager and whoever has
offended her and come up with a solution to work together and not be offended.
Sexual
harassment is not always about the sex; like rape, it is more about controlling
a person’s two most private possessions: the mind and soul. Once someone takes
one of the two or sometimes both, the victim feels inferior and at loss of his
or her livelihood, depressed, and simply destroys life as he or she knew it
(O’Shea 37). The constant worry that “it’s my fault that such-and-such happens
to me” is another result of victimization. Advice for victims: Do something
healing for yourself such as exercise, joining support groups, tell family
members, and of course, confide in God Himself (O’Shea 173).
The
line between flirtation and sexual harassment is drawn when the flirting is no longer
fun and affects performance and the pursuit of happiness in life. The
six-year-old boy has to wear the “harasser” label for the rest of his life as a
result of one little kiss, while professional harassers such as America’s
Republican senators can get away with raping the minds and souls of people
everywhere and only receive a slap on the wrist. Sexual misconduct is not
always sexual harassment since some are defaming to characters, but all sexual
harassment cases are sexual misconduct according to our courts and laws. It is
indeed a violation of state and federal laws and in some institutions, a reason
for dismissal or termination from a post or university. Action should be taken
immediately and stick with the case until the desired result is obtained if
anyone were to be victimized; follow-up is doing healthy, positive things such
as jogging and confiding in another person.
Works Cited
Tufts University. “What Is Sexual Harassment?”. Barnet
598-602. Barnet, Sylvan and
Hugo Bedau.
Current Issues and Enduring Question. 5th ed. Boston: Bedford/St. Martin’s, 1999.
McCarthy, Sarah J. “Cultural Fascism.” Barnet and Bedau
613-615.
Kelly, Evelyn B. Legal Basics. Bloomington, IN: Phi Delta
Kappa Educational
Foundation,
1998.
Miramontes, David J. How to Deal With Sexual Harassment. Del
Mar, CA: Network
Communications,
1984.
O’Shea, Tracy. Sexual Harassment. New York: St. Martin’s Griffin, 1998.
Sexual Harassment:
It’s Not Academic Pamphlet. ED/OCR. 28 September 1999. http://www.ed.gov/offices/OCR/ocrshpam.html
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