‘Tiger Woods types’ still harassing women sexually at work
September 11th, 2010 - 5:41 pm ICT by ANI
Melbourne, Sept 11 (ANI): Sexual harassment of female employees at the workplace still continues as companies fail to manage male workers with similar mental health problems as golfer Tiger Woods.
Australian Human Resources Institute national president Peter Wilson also said that an older generation of men who felt insecure around women at work was another cause for the spread of the “corporate cancer” of sexual harassment.
“There’s a real malaise in companies - ‘no complaint, no problem’ is the standard we’ve set for sexual harassment,” the Courier Mail quoted him as saying.
“We need a bit of shock therapy for a moral hazard that has been allowed to exist for too long,” he stated.
Wilson said women made up only six percent of senior executive roles and eight percent of board positions, a statistic considered world’s worst practice by the OECD, which compounded widespread bullying and harassment of women at work.
He said focus groups involving the human resource directors of more than 50 top Australian companies, employing 5000-20,000 staff, identified five key causes underlying the suppression of women’s employment potential and their exposure to harassment.
These included a predominant male work culture which enabled men with sex addictions and other mental health problems; an older generation of men who felt insecure around women at work and an elite group of men who felt entitled to the top jobs.
“Complainants or potential complainants are telling HR directors of particular male colleagues who continue to loiter around them, who touch them or make ambiguous comments and who they think have a problem with sex,” Wilson said.
Other causes were the failure of women to support one another in the workplace and the reluctance of victims of sexual harassment to make claims for fear of damaging their reputations or careers or because they lacked confidence in complaint processes in their organisation.
“The basic sexual harassment policies have let us down,” Wilson said.
“CEOs need to make some high profile decisions to say to people that it’s not acceptable because, at the moment, the men are circling the wagons,” he added.
Wilson also said that board members of companies also needed to muster the “courage” to cull senior offenders from their ranks or face the risk of criminal and civil litigation. (ANI)
- Cabinet clears bill against workplace sexual harassment (Lead) - Nov 04, 2010
- Pak working women face rampant sexual harassment despite existence of law - Sep 20, 2010
- Bill against sexual harassment at workplace introduced - Dec 07, 2010
- NGOs want protection of men in sexual harassment bill - Jul 17, 2010
- Calendar depicting 'sexual harassers' launched in Islamabad - Jan 16, 2011
- American Teens Encounter Sexual Harassment On Job - Jun 08, 2010
- Female patients face harassment, sexual assaults in Victorian psychiatric wards - Oct 02, 2010
- Sexual discrimination reconsidered - Aug 06, 2010
- Teenagers More At Risk From Sexual Predators - Jun 08, 2010
- Saudi law allows only women clerks in lingerie shops - Jan 05, 2012
- 'Price is Right' model sues former employer - Sep 08, 2011
- Cabinet approves bill against sexual harassment at workplace - Nov 04, 2010
- Sexual competition makes women more jealous than men - May 04, 2012
- 90pc women 'sexually harassed at the workplace' - Aug 11, 2010
- One-third Austrian women sexually harassed at work - Nov 22, 2011
Tags: australian human resources institute, board positions, bullying and harassment, courier mail, executive roles, golfer tiger woods, hr directors, human resource directors, human resources institute, male colleagues, mental health problems, moral hazard, national president, peter wilson, president peter, sex addictions, sexual harassment, shock therapy, women at work, work culture