McLaughlin Heather, Uggen Christopher, Blackstone Amy
University of Minnesota.
Am Sociol Rev. 2012 Aug;77(4):625-647. doi: 10.1177/0003122412451728. Epub 2012 Jul 2.
Power is at the core of feminist theories of sexual harassment, though it has rarely been measured directly in terms of workplace authority. While popular characterizations portray male supervisors harassing female subordinates, power-threat theories suggest that women in authority may be more frequent targets. This article analyzes longitudinal survey data and qualitative interviews from the Youth Development Study (YDS) to test this idea and to delineate why and how supervisory authority, gender non-conformity, and workplace sex ratios affect harassment. Relative to non-supervisors, female supervisors are more likely to report harassing behaviors and to define their experiences as sexual harassment. Sexual harassment can serve as an "equalizer" against women in power, motivated more by control and domination than by sexual desire. The interviews point to social isolation as a mechanism linking harassment to gender non-conformity and women's authority, particularly in male-dominated work settings.
权力是性骚扰女性主义理论的核心,尽管很少直接从职场权威的角度来衡量它。虽然普遍的描述是男性上司骚扰女性下属,但权力威胁理论表明,处于权威地位的女性可能是更常见的目标。本文分析了青年发展研究(YDS)的纵向调查数据和定性访谈,以检验这一观点,并阐明监督权威、性别不符合常规以及职场性别比例为何及如何影响骚扰行为。相对于非上司而言,女性上司更有可能报告骚扰行为,并将她们的经历定义为性骚扰。性骚扰可以成为针对掌权女性的一种“平衡手段”,其动机更多是控制和支配,而非性欲。访谈指出,社会孤立是一种将骚扰行为与性别不符合常规及女性权威联系起来的机制,尤其是在男性主导的工作环境中。