Sexual harassment law addresses hostile environments by evaluating whether the workplace environment would be considered hostile by a “reasonable woman”. But who is a reasonable woman? Defendant‐employers may present one group of women employees as representative “reasonable” women and assert that any of these women’s co‐workers who have had different experiences with regard to sexual harassment are not “reasonable”. However, when male employees categorize various groups of female coworkers differently and, subsequently, treat them differently, the experiences of women from one of these groups would not be indicative of the experiences of women from an other group. This “selective sexual harassment” was present in the workplace I studied: while both groups of women were “reasonable”, they had very different experiences, only one of which might be confirmed by a court as the perspective of “reasonable” women. This article advocates for a version of the “reason ble victim” standard to facilitate a closer analysis of hostile environment sexual harassment suits.
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1 April 2004
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Equal Opportunities International
Case Report|
April 01 2004
Women treated differently: why the “reasonable woman” standard might not be reasonable
Elizabeth A. Hoffmann
Elizabeth A. Hoffmann
Purdue University
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Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Online ISSN: 1758-7093
Print ISSN: 0261-0159
© Emerald Group Publishing Limited
2004
Equal Opportunities International (2004) 23 (3-4-5): 67–79.
Citation
Hoffmann EA (2004), "Women treated differently: why the “reasonable woman” standard might not be reasonable". Equal Opportunities International, Vol. 23 No. 3-4-5 pp. 67–79, doi: https://doi.org/10.1108/02610150410787738
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