What can employers do about harassment at work?
Recently, hundreds of women have spoken out about sexual harassment they have experienced in the workplace, with a new, unforgiving spotlight being shone on those accused of perpetrating abuse.
As light is shone on years of alleged sexual misconduct by industry moguls it has also become clear that the problem extends far beyond the world of entertainment.
According to a YouGov survey of 1,000 adults. Only 27% of all people who experience sexual harassment report it. 70% said they did not report it and 4% of “preferred not to say”.
A survey published today for the Telegraph shows one in five women have been victims of sexual harassment in the workplace; similar polling at the BBC has found as many as half of women have been harassed at work.
So what, can employers do about harassment at work?
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Understand what sexual harassment is
“It can be uncertain if someone has suffered ‘sexual harassment’,” says Dr Fiona Vera-Gray, research fellow at Durham Law School. Some forms of harassment can be passed off as “banter” or be “quite subtle”, she says, while women can be criticised for “not taking a joke” or being “narcissistic”.
Everyone should familiarise themselves with what constitutes harassment in order to remove ambiguity about what’s appropriate.
It would be wise as an employer to have your own clear definition that considers your working environment. Informal industries which a lot of socialising are likely to be a a greater risk thereby requiring greater resource to consider and mitigate.
2. Understand the law
3. Create a Dignity at Work policy
Employers should be required to have clear sexual harassment policies in place, and make sure that everyone knows about them, so that victims can take actions as soon as an inappropriate encounter occurs. Policy should include:- Dignity at work charter
- Clear definitions including Bullying Vs Management
- Grievance procedures
- Roles
- Responding to a Harassment compliant
- Investigation & Outcome
- When a Bullying Compliant is Upheld
- When referred to external Bodies
Procedures need to consider that reporting harassment can be more difficult for people in less formal employment because it may not be clear who they can speak to or what the consequences could be.
“Someone who’s quite high up in a bank will be supported by a lot of HR policies as opposed to a domestic or casual worker,” says Vera-Gray. “There’s a big push at the moment on speaking out and I’m worried individuals are going to have to shoulder the responsibility.”
4. Educate your employees and their rights and your procedures.
Indeed, education is the single most important step we can take to crack down on sexual harassment, and government and employers should work together to deliver it. Employers – especially large employers – should offer specific training on sexual harassment. All staff should know what inappropriate behaviour looks like, and that the employer has a zero-tolerance policy. It needs to be understood that the “just banter” defence is not appropriate Most employers have policies and guidelines about sexual harassment, but these may not be visible to workers, and management may not have had formal training.Vera-Gray hopes “to see workplaces bringing in more mandatory sexual harassment training so this isn’t an issue that sparks up and dies down,” she says. “I’d like to see a cultural shift.