Power Plays at Work

Recent research shows that more than 30 percent of  female workers in the United States have been harassed  at work—virtually all of them by men. Forty-three percent  identified the male harasser as a supervisor, 27 percent as  an employee senior to them, and 19 percent as a coworker  at the same level. In 2012 (the last year for which there is  complete data), nearly 13,000 charges of sexual harassment  were filed with the EEOC, 84 percent of them by women.

Why does sexual harassment (mostly of women) occur  in the workplace? “Power,” says researcher Debbie Dougherty,  who conducted a study in conjunction with a large Midwestern  health care organization. “It was the common answer. It came  up repeatedly,” says Dougherty, a specialist in communications and power in organizations. She also found that men  and women understand the idea of power differently, and that  difference in understanding may play an important part in the  persistence of harassing behavior in the workplace:

 

  • For most men, power is something that belongs to superiors—managers and supervisors—who can harass because they possess the power to do so. By definition, a  male coworker cannot actually harass a female coworker  who’s at the same level because he doesn’t possess  sufficient power over her.

 

  • Women, on the other hand, see power as something that can be introduced into a relationship as it develops; it’s  something more than the mere formal authority built  into the superior’s job description. Harassment can be  initiated by anyone who’s able to create the perception  of power.

Case Questions

  1. In light of the research discussed in this case, in your opinion, how should sexual harassment be punished?
  2. What laws relate most closely to sexual harassment?
  3. What legal protection, if any, should exist to protect an innocent individual from false charges of sexual harassment?
  4. How might sexual harassment relate to bullying?

Power Plays at Work. Review the information on this

site: https://www.eeoc.gov/laws/types/sexual_harassment.cfm