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The promise and peril of sexual harassment programs

Frank Dobbin () and Alexandra Kalev
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Frank Dobbin: Department of Sociology, Harvard University, Cambridge MA 02138
Alexandra Kalev: Department of Sociology and Anthropology, Tel Aviv University, 6997801 Tel Aviv, Israel

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2019, vol. 116, issue 25, 12255-12260

Abstract: Two decades ago, the Supreme Court vetted the workplace harassment programs popular at the time: sexual harassment grievance procedures and training. However, harassment at work remains common. Do these programs reduce harassment? Program effects have been difficult to measure, but, because women frequently quit their jobs after being harassed, programs that reduce harassment should help firms retain current and aspiring women managers. Thus, effective programs should be followed by increases in women managers. We analyze data from 805 companies over 32 y to explore how new sexual harassment programs affect the representation of white, black, Hispanic, and Asian-American women in management. We find support for several propositions. First, sexual harassment grievance procedures, shown in surveys to incite retaliation without satisfying complainants, are followed by decreases in women managers. Second, training for managers, which encourages managers to look for signs of trouble and intervene, is followed by increases in women managers. Third, employee training, which proscribes specific behaviors and signals that male trainees are potential perpetrators, is followed by decreases in women managers. Two propositions specify how management composition moderates program effects. One, because women are more likely to believe harassment complaints and less likely to respond negatively to training, in firms with more women managers, programs work better. Two, in firms with more women managers, harassment programs may activate group threat and backlash against some groups of women. Positive and negative program effects are found in different sorts of workplaces.

Keywords: sexual harassment; workforce diversity; grievance procedure; harassment training (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2019
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Citations: View citations in EconPapers (5)

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