Rational women: A test for sex-based harassment

被引:23
|
作者
Hadfield, GK
机构
关键词
D O I
10.2307/3480877
中图分类号
D9 [法律]; DF [法律];
学科分类号
0301 ;
摘要
The issue of what constitutes acceptable sexual conduct in the workplace has sparked contentious social debate. In addition, courts have disagreed about how to define actionable sex-based harassment under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act. Under the current doctrine, courts render case-by-case judgments about whether particular acts of harassment are harmful or offensive enough to constitute discrimination. This inquiry is laden with subjective value judgments, and it transforms the individual harassment case into a microcosm for the larger social debate about what behavior is acceptable in the workplace. This Article presents an alternative test for evaluating sexual harassment claims under Title VII that avoids normative speculation. The Article starts from the premise that Title VII's objective is to ensure that women's employment decisions are not burdened by factors that do not enter into men's employment decisions. The author demonstrates that sex-based harassment plays a significant role in women's economic status, directly effecting women's job retention rates and contributing to horizontal and vertical occupational segregation. Employing economic analysis, the author suggests that behavior should be considered discriminatory whenever it would lead a hypothetical rational woman to alter her employment decisions if she could do so at little or no cost.
引用
收藏
页码:1151 / 1189
页数:39
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] The Sex-Based Harassment Inventory: A Gender Status Threat Measure of Sex-Based Harassment Intentions
    Matthew Grabowski
    Tuyen K. Dinh
    Wei Wu
    Margaret S. Stockdale
    Sex Roles, 2022, 86 : 648 - 666
  • [2] The Sex-Based Harassment Inventory: A Gender Status Threat Measure of Sex-Based Harassment Intentions
    Grabowski, Matthew
    Dinh, Tuyen K.
    Wu, Wei
    Stockdale, Margaret S.
    SEX ROLES, 2022, 86 (11-12) : 648 - 666
  • [3] Sex-Based Harassment and Symbolic Compliance
    Edelman, Lauren B.
    Cabrera, Jessica
    ANNUAL REVIEW OF LAW AND SOCIAL SCIENCE, VOL 16, 2020, 16 : 361 - 383
  • [4] QUESTIONNAIRE OF EXPOSURE TO WORKPLACE SEX-BASED HARASSMENT
    Drabek, Marcin
    MEDYCYNA PRACY, 2020, 71 (06) : 699 - 713
  • [5] Gender Harassment: Broadening Our Understanding of Sex-Based Harassment at Work
    Leskinen, Emily A.
    Cortina, Lilia M.
    Kabat, Dana B.
    LAW AND HUMAN BEHAVIOR, 2011, 35 (01) : 25 - 39
  • [6] A Test in the High School Context of Berdahl's Status Theory of Sex-Based Harassment
    Shute, Rosalyn H.
    JOURNAL OF INTERPERSONAL VIOLENCE, 2021, 36 (1-2) : NP735 - NP752
  • [7] Sex-based harassment and organizational silencing: How women are led to reluctant acquiescence in academia
    Fernando, Dulini
    Prasad, Ajnesh
    HUMAN RELATIONS, 2019, 72 (10) : 1565 - 1594
  • [8] Four ways forward in studying sex-based harassment
    Berdahl, Jennifer
    Bhattacharyya, Barnini
    EQUALITY DIVERSITY AND INCLUSION, 2021, 40 (04): : 477 - 492
  • [9] Sexual harassment in healthcare - Classification of harassers and rationalizations of sex-based harassment behavior
    Madison, J
    Minichiello, V
    JOURNAL OF NURSING ADMINISTRATION, 2001, 31 (11): : 534 - 543
  • [10] Sex-Based Harassment in Employment: New Insights into Gender and Context
    Kabat-Farr, Dana
    Cortina, Lilia M.
    LAW AND HUMAN BEHAVIOR, 2014, 38 (01) : 58 - 72