Catalysts and rationales for reporting staff sexual misconduct to UK higher education institutions

IF 1.7 Q2 CRIMINOLOGY & PENOLOGY Journal of Gender-Based Violence Pub Date : 2021-04-20 DOI:10.1332/239868021x16270572218631
A. Bull
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

The majority of research on reporting of sexual violence and harassment has focused on reasons why women don’t report their experiences rather than examining why they do. This article takes this discussion into the higher education setting, drawing on interviews with 16 students and early career researchers in the UK who considered or attempted to report staff sexual misconduct to their institution and analysing their motivations for doing so. The motivations are broken down into two aspects: the immediate catalysts that triggered the report or disclosure, and the deeper rationales for why interviewees made this decision. Separating catalysts and rationales for reporting in this way allows different levels of decision-making over time to become clearer. Interviewees’ catalysts for reporting included leaving their institution, needing an extension on an assignment, protecting their own physical safety, or being validated by a third party. By contrast, the main rationale that interviewees gave for trying to report staff sexual misconduct was to prevent other women being targeted. Further rationales identified were fighting injustice and reporting for academic or career-related reasons. Higher education institutions’ policies and practices in this area need to take into account these different levels of decision-making around disclosure and reporting.Key messagesThere is much less research examining the reasons why victim-survivors do not report sexual violence and harassment than the reasons why they do report.In this study of students and staff who reported staff sexual misconduct to their university, the main rationale that interviewees gave for trying to report was to prevent other women being targeted.The article argues that separating catalysts for reporting from rationales makes visible different levels of decision-making over time.
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向英国高等教育机构报告员工性不端行为的催化剂和理由
大多数关于性暴力和性骚扰报告的研究都集中在女性不报告她们经历的原因上,而不是研究她们为什么要报告。本文将这一讨论带入高等教育环境,通过对英国16名学生和早期职业研究人员的采访,他们考虑或试图向他们的机构报告员工的性行为不端,并分析他们这样做的动机。动机分为两个方面:一是引发报告或披露的直接催化剂,二是受访者做出这一决定的深层原因。以这种方式分离报告的催化剂和基本原理,可以使不同层次的决策随着时间的推移变得更加清晰。受访者报告的催化剂包括离开他们的机构,需要延长任务期限,保护自己的人身安全,或者得到第三方的验证。相比之下,受访者试图举报工作人员不当性行为的主要理由是防止其他妇女成为攻击目标。进一步确定的理由是反对不公正和为学术或职业相关原因进行报道。高等教育机构在这一领域的政策和实践需要考虑到围绕披露和报告的这些不同层次的决策。关键信息调查受害者幸存者不报告性暴力和性骚扰原因的研究要比调查他们报告的原因少得多。在这项研究中,学生和员工向他们的大学报告了员工的性行为不端,受访者给出的主要理由是试图报告是为了防止其他女性成为攻击目标。这篇文章认为,将报告的催化剂从基本原理中分离出来,随着时间的推移,可以看到不同层次的决策。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.80
自引率
20.00%
发文量
49
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