Create Diverse, Inclusive, and Respectful Environments
Improve Transparency and Accountability
Provide Support for the Target of Harassment
Take explicit steps to achieve greater gender + racial equity in hiring and in promotions. Additionally, it is recommended that there be an improvement in representation of women at entry-level positions.
Combine anti-harassment efforts with programs to promote civility. They can be intensive 6-month intervention programs geared to enhance employees’ interpersonal awareness skills, respect, and civility.
Training should focus on changing behavior, not on changing beliefs. These programs should clearly communicate behavioral expectations and specify consequences for failing to meet those expectations, not solely on the avoidance of legal liability.
Develop and share clear, accessible, and consistent policies on sexual harassment and standards of behavior. Make clear that people will be held accountable for violating the policies.
Utilize climate surveys to further investigate and address systemic sexual harassment. The results of these surveys should be shared publicly to demonstrate that the institution takes the issue seriously.
Provide means for the target of harassment to access support services (social, health care, legal, and career).
Provide alternative and less formal means of recording information about the experience and reporting the experience – anonymous, confidential reporting systems outside of the usual workplace hierarchy. Explore restorative justice processes as well.
Strive for Strong and Diverse Leadership
Diffuse Hierarchal Relationships between Trainees and Faculty
College and university presidents, provosts, deans, department chairs, and program directors must make the reduction and prevention of sexual harassment an explicit goal of their future.
Support and facilitate leaders at every level (university, school/college, department, lab, etc) in developing skills in leadership, conflict resolution, mediation, negotiation, and de-escalation, and ensure a clear understanding of policies and procedures for handling sexual harassment issues.
Adopt mentoring networks or committee-based advising that allows for a diversity of potential pathways for advice, funding, support, and informal reporting of harassment.
Content Source
The content on this page is from a brochure developed The National Academic of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine.
Interventions for Preventing Sexual Harassment. 2018. Sexual Harassment of Women: Climate, Culture, and Consequences in Academic Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine. (800): 624-642.