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Attitudes and perceptions of workers to sexual harrassment

journal contribution
posted on 2005-12-01, 00:00 authored by M McCabe, L Hardman
The authors investigated how individual factors (age, gender, gender role, past experiences of sexual harassment) and organizational factors (gender ratio, sexual harassment policies, the role of employers) related to workers' attitudes toward and perceptions of sexual harassment. In Study 1, participants were 176 workers from a large, white-collar organization. In Study 2, participants were 75 workers from a smaller, blue-collar organization. Individuals from Study 2 experienced more sexual harassment, were more tolerant of sexual harassment, and perceived less behavior as sexual harassment than did individuals from Study 1. For both samples, organizational and individual factors predicted workers' attitudes toward and experiences of sexual harassment. Individual factors—such as age, gender, gender role, past experiences of sexual harassment, and perceptions of management's tolerance of sexual harassment—predicted attitudes toward sexual harassment. Workers' attitudes, the behavioral context, and the gender of the victim and perpetrator predicted perceptions of sexual harassment. The authors discussed the broader implications of these findings and suggested recommendations for future research.

History

Journal

Journal of social psychology

Volume

145

Pagination

719 - 740

Location

Washington D.C.

ISSN

0022-4545

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2007 Heldref Publications, Helen Dwight Reid Educational Foundation

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