One in seven people admit to using tech to sexually harass colleagues at work, new data shows
One in seven people are using tech platforms to sexually harass their colleagues, according to new data from Australia's National Research Organisation for Women's Safety (ANROWS).
More than 3,000 people across the country were surveyed, with men more than three times more likely to harass their colleagues using work email, social media and text.
Perpetrators frequently admitted to doing this to humiliate and frighten their targets, rather than out of any desire to engage in a sexual relationship with them.
Young people and women were particularly at risk of this kind of harassment, with work and personal emails and phones most commonly used by perpetrators.
According to the Australian Bureau of Statistics, 26 per cent of women who experienced sexual harassment did so at work, with 57 per cent subjected to it electronically.
Reducing sexual harassment in the workplace is a key element of the National Plan to End Violence Against Women and Their Children.
The government's plan aims to end it within a generation, but has not specified a more detailed timeline for when targets will need to be met.
Associate Professor of Criminology at Monash University and lead researcher Asher Flynn found victims felt they weren't able to escape the harassment.
"If you're being sexually harassed through technologies, you could be sitting at home on the couch watching the television and you could get an email or a message from someone," Dr Flynn said.
"And it's the feeling that they're always present that really impacts significantly on victims."
Dr Flynn said the data debunked the myth that workplace sexual harassment is the result of someone clumsily approaching a colleague for a romantic or sexual relationship.
More than one in four of those who admitted to using tech to sexually harass a colleague said they did it to frighten or humiliate their victim.
"You're not just accidentally stepping over the line. You're deliberately doing this to make people uncomfortable."
"One in seven is quite a significant number, but we would suggest that given around one in three people have experienced some type of sexual harassment, that it is likely that there are higher numbers of people engaging in this type of abuse."
CEO of ANROWS Tessa Boyd-Caine said while technological advancements have improved the workplace in many ways, it can be a double-edged sword.
"This research shows that we haven't kept up with the way technology can also be driving sexual harassment at work," she said.
"We haven't understood what technology facilitated workplace sexual harassment looks like, and we certainly haven't got the policy, the procedures and the cultures in place to keep people safe at work through the uses of technology."
Since 2022 employers have been required by law to take steps to try to eliminate sexual discrimination as much as possible.
Workers bearing the brunt of creepy comments and unwanted advances say it's is not good enough that rates of sexual harassment haven't improved over the past four years. WARNING: This article contains detailed descriptions of sexual harassment
But respondents involved in the ANROWS research said they didn't know where to start and urged government to provide mandated requirements and guidance on how to stamp out tech-facilitated sexual harassment particularly when it comes to consequences for perpetrators.
The report calls for workplace policies to specifically mention tech-based sexual harassment and a clear definition of what constitutes appropriate and inappropriate behaviour concerning work contexts and digital technologies.
"It's important to recognise technology is not the enemy here, but it does need to be incorporated into the broader work that we're doing to cultivate respectful environments at work," said Ms Boyd-Caine.
"We also need to see coordinated efforts across workplaces and government to prioritise active measures that prevent and and effectively respond to workplace technology-facilitated sexual harassment."
We acknowledge Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples as the First Australians and Traditional Custodians of the lands where we live, learn, and work.
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