Sexual harassment
is unwanted and unwelcomed sexual behavior. Sexual harassment may result from words or conduct of a sexual
nature that offend, stigmatize, demean, frighten, or threaten you because
of your sex.
Sexual harassment is defined by the person being targeted. The target of sexual harassment and the perpetrator (the one
doing the harassing) do not have to agree about what is happening.
Sexual harassment
can happen once or many times. Being the target of sexual harassment
may make it scary to go to work/school or hard to concentrate. Incidents
of sexual harassment may cause the target to feel uncomfortable, embarrassed,
or threatened.
Employers and school district
officials are legally responsible to guarantee a safe environment which is free from sexual harassment
and sex discrimination.
Some forms of sexual
harassment are also crimes and should be reported to the police or district
attorney so that the perpetrator(s) can be prosecuted.
What can I do?
Tips If You Feel
You Are the Target of Sexual Harassment
- Let the harasser
know you don't like the behavior or comments. If you feel safe and
comfortable doing so, tell the harasser that his or her behavior bothers
you and that you want it to stop.
- Tell someone
and keep telling until you find someone who believes you. Find supporters
and talk with them about what's happening. The point is to find someone
you can trust, and someone who will take the kinds of actions you
want.
- Do not blame
yourself for sexual harassment. Harassment is unwanted and can make
you feel trapped, confused, helpless, frustrated, embarrassed, and
scared. You certainly did not ask for any of those feelings.
- Keep a written
record of the incidents: what happened, when, where, who else was
present, and how you reacted. Save any notes or pictures you receive
from the harasser.
- Go to a supervisor or school staff member. If
you feel uncomfortable, it is okay to bring a coworker, friend or parent
with you to that meeting.
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