Chicago Sun-Times

Complicity and silence are common in cases of sexual harassment

- BY SANDY HERSHCOVIS, IVANA VRANJES, JENNIFER L. BERDAHL AND LILIA M. CORTINA

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s resignatio­n came after more than a week of bad news, starting with a damning report from the state attorney general’s office that detailed his sexual harassment of 11 women, some of whom worked in his office. An executive assistant to Cuomo, Brittany Commisso, filed a criminal complaint against him with the Albany County sheriff ’s office. The state Legislatur­e readied impeachmen­t proceeding­s.

Then, top aide Melissa DeRosa resigned amid a flurry of questions surroundin­g her role in protecting Cuomo. Attorney Roberta Kaplan also resigned from the #MeToo advocacy organizati­on Time’s Up after the attorney general’s report revealed that she helped draft a letter that denied Cuomo’s wrongdoing.

As news emerged about the silence from Cuomo’s staff, who had long protected him, and his victims who feared blowback, our thoughts turned immediatel­y to our research on harassers.

“See No Evil, Hear No Evil, Speak No Evil” is the title of our new article for the Journal of Applied Psychology, which describes the role witnesses play in helping and protecting harassers. Evidence suggests that, rather than helping victims, witnesses often protect the harasser.

The report on Cuomo’s sexual harassment is replete with examples that showcase how members of Cuomo’s top staff, known collective­ly as the “Executive Chamber,” silenced victims. One victim explained in the report: “I was terrified that if I shared what was going on that it would somehow get around … and if senior aides Stephanie Benton or Melissa DeRosa heard that, I was going to lose my job.”

Although #MeToo gave voice to millions of women to speak up about sexual harassment, it remains rare for victims to report sexual harassment to employers. They are afraid of blowback. They think management won’t believe them. They fear being blamed or shamed. And these fears are warranted.

Silent complicity

Research shows that reporting mechanisms rarely work and often backfire.

For example, employees who speak up about workplace harassment frequently face retaliatio­n, both personal and profession­al. This is evident in multiple victim accounts in the Cuomo investigat­ion.

One victim was quoted in the report saying that “she did not feel she could safely report or rebuff the conduct because, based on her experience and discussion with others … it’s kind of known that the governor gives the seal of approval who gets promoted and who doesn’t.”

But what about bystanders? Colleagues? Leaders? Why don’t they speak up when they see sexual harassment?

Part of the problem, we have found, lies with social networks — the webs of interconne­ctions among victims, perpetrato­rs, co-workers and managers. The way these networks are configured encourages members to be silent, silence others and not hear victims who voice concerns about sexual harassment.

One of Cuomo’s 11 alleged victims, a state trooper, described a conversati­on she had with Cuomo while driving him to an event. The governor questioned her clothing choices, asking why she wasn’t wearing a dress. After the conversati­on, the victim’s state police superior, who was in the car during the interactio­n, messaged her, saying that the conversati­on “stays in the truck.”

‘Textbook example’

Why do people protect harassers? A number of factors are at play.

First, a harasser can establish a central status by having many strong ties to others in the network. Strong relationsh­ips within a tie require an investment of time and resources on both sides, and in turn, they yield loyalty and reciprocit­y. So network members close to the harasser are more likely to stay silent about his misdeeds, and to silence or manipulate those who speak up into questionin­g their sanity.

Also, when the harasser is the sole link between disconnect­ed members of the network, he can isolate victims, control informatio­n and conceal wrongdoing. The result of all this: Victims, witnesses and would-be supporters stay silent.

In the case of Cuomo, he had many loyal ties. The attorney general’s report states that the Executive Chamber had “an intense and overriding focus on secrecy and loyalty that meant that any and all perceived acts of ‘disloyalty,’ including criticism of the governor [Cuomo] or his senior staff, would be met with attacks of a personal and profession­al nature.”

The second reason people protect male sexual harassers lies in how certain network beliefs prize men and masculinit­y. These beliefs normalize male dominance over women, encouragin­g support for those who enact displays of masculine superiorit­y.

When these beliefs pervade a social network, and central men sexually harass women, network members stay silent. They also rally to defend and protect harassers by silencing and not hearing those who speak up.

Because women are devalued in these networks, powerful witnesses have little motive to hear sexual harassment complaints or take action to support female victims. The investigat­ion into Cuomo’s conduct concluded: “This culture of fear, intimidati­on, and retributio­n co-existed in the Executive Chamber with one that accepted and normalized everyday flirtation­s and genderbase­d comments by the governor.”

Finally, mythologie­s about sexual harassment are frequently found in social networks such as the one that surrounded Cuomo. These common myths deny that sexual harassment has happened, often by questionin­g women’s complaints — for example, suggesting that false allegation­s are common. Or they downplay the gravity of these offenses.

When harassment becomes undeniable, myths lead network members to move on to justify it: absolving harassers of responsibi­lity or blaming victims — asking what women did to invite sexual advances.

Myths such as these silence network members because speaking up is likely to be futile or even dangerous. Throughout the report, senior staff members in Cuomo’s office denied wrongdoing by Cuomo. One victim, Ana Liss, testified that Cuomo had held her hand, kissed her cheek and been flirtatiou­s. She did not want to report it because “the environmen­t in the Executive Chamber deterred her … she was fully expecting the governor’s team would deny, deny, deny, character assassinat­e.”

It is rare that scholarly research and current events so neatly reflect each other. But the Cuomo case is — no metaphor here — a textbook example of a network of complicity and silence around sexual harassment.

Sandy Hershcovis is a professor at Haskayne School of Business, University of Calgary. Ivana Vranjes is an assistant professor of Social Psychology at Tilburg University. Jennifer L. Berdahl is professor of Sociology at the University of British Columbia. Lilia M. Cortina is a professor of Psychology, Women’s & Gender Studies, and Management & Organizati­ons at the University of Michigan. This article originally was published on The Conversati­on.

 ?? AP ?? Andrew Cuomo announced Tuesday that he would resign as governor of New York.
AP Andrew Cuomo announced Tuesday that he would resign as governor of New York.

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