How common is sexual harassment?

FOR social scientists the apparent epidemic of propositioning, pinching, groping and flashing that is gripping America brings a rare opportunity to observe a new norm, around how men behave towards women, being created in real time. First though, they must figure out the extent of the problem. The most extreme example—rape—is hard enough to count. Government statistics produced by the Centres for Disease Control and Protection suggest that one in five women and one in 60 men have been a victim of rape or an attempted rape in their lifetime. On the other end of the scale, sexual harassment—a charge that rarely carries criminal punishment—is far more common, and harder still to count.

It is also a fairly new phenomenon, in the sense that there was no phrase that described it until the late-1970s. That coincided with women’s growing importance in the labour force as their share of jobs rose from 33% to 42% over the preceding two decades. A formal legal definition arrived in 1980 when the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission...Continue reading

Source: United States http://ift.tt/2z85zXH

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