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Preventing Discrimination
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Preventing Sexual Harassment in the Workplace

Learn what sexual harassment is -- and how to prevent it.

As an employer, you have a responsibility to maintain a workplace that is free of sexual harassment. This is your legal obligation, but it also makes good business sense. If you allow sexual harassment to flourish in your workplace, you will pay a high price in terms of poor employee morale, low productivity, and lawsuits.

The same laws that prohibit gender discrimination prohibit sexual harassment. Title VII of the Civil Rights Act is the main federal law that prohibits sexual harassment. (For more information on Title VII, see Federal Antidiscrimination Laws.) In addition, each state has its own anti-sexual harassment law.

What Is Sexual Harassment

Sexual harassment is any unwelcome sexual advance or conduct on the job that creates an intimidating, hostile, or offensive working environment. Any conduct of a sexual nature that makes an employee uncomfortable has the potential to be sexual harassment.

Given this broad definition, it is not surprising that sexual harassment comes in many forms. The following are all examples of sexual harassment:

  • A supervisor implies to an employee that the employee must sleep with him to keep a job.
  • A sales clerk makes demeaning comments about female customers to his coworkers.
  • An office manager in a law firm is made uncomfortable by lawyers who regularly tell sexually explicit jokes.
  • A cashier at a store pinches and fondles a coworker against her will.
  • A secretary's coworkers belittle her and refer to her by sexist or demeaning terms.
  • Several employees post sexually explicit jokes on an office intranet bulletin board.
  • An employee sends emails to coworkers that contain sexually explicit language and jokes.


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