Abstract
Black women’s sexual harassment is often overlooked and dismissed relative to White women’s harassment. In three pre-registered experiments, we test whether this neglect extends to bystander intervention in sexual harassment. Participants observed an ostensibly live job interview between a man manager and a Black or White woman job candidate. The manager’s questions were pre-programmed to grow increasingly harassing, and participants were asked to intervene if/when they found the interview inappropriate. A meta-analysis of the three studies (N = 1487), revealed that bystanders did not differ in their threshold for intervention when sexual harassment targeted the Black vs. White woman. Despite evidence for the relative neglect of Black women in responses to sexual harassment, these data suggest that bystanders may respond similarly for Black and White women.
Funder
National Science Foundation
Publisher
Public Library of Science (PLoS)
Reference54 articles.
1. MeToo and intersectionality: an examination of the# MeToo movement through the R. Kelly scandal;R Leung;J Commun Inq,2019
2. “Me Too” founder Tarana Burke says Black girls’ trauma shouldn’t be ignored [Internet].;T. Mosley;(Fresh Air).
3. Responses from the field: sexual assault, domestic violence, and policing.;D Coker;Univ Miami Leg Stud Res Pap,2015
4. Disclosure of sexual assault: characteristics and implications for posttraumatic stress symptoms among African American and Caucasian survivors;AJ Jacques-Tiura;J Trauma Dissociation,2010
5. A meta-analysis of the antecedents and consequences of workplace sexual harassment.;CR Willness;Pers Psychol,2007