Preventing and Redressing Sexual Harassment

Laxmi Murthy, Ragamalika Karthikeyan, Aayushi Agarwal and Sudarshana Kundu*


The revelations of sexual harassment in the entertainment and news media industry in September-October 2018, laid bare what had hitherto been an open secret for insiders in the industry but seldom talked about publicly. Despite the enactment of the Sexual Harassment of Women at Workplace (Prevention, Prohibition and Redressal) Act, 2013, which built on the Vishaka Guidelines laid down by the Supreme Court of India in 1997, the media industry in India continues to witness rampant sexual harassment.


We knew, from anecdotal experiences and also through having dealt with cases of sexual harassment at various media outlets, that in many instances, the mandatory requirements of the law were not in place. In others, the setting up of redressal mechanisms such as Internal Committees (IC) had not ensured justice for media women who raised complaints. The NWMI has been systematically engaged in cases of sexual harassment in the workplace, issuing statements, providing support for survivors and also making policy interventions.


The idea of systematically gathering evidence about whether and how effectively media houses across the country are responding to the issue of sexual harassment had been in the pipeline for a couple of years. This data would give insights into the lacunae in the law and its implementation on the ground, as well as provide opportunities for positive intervention by the network.


The survey, launched in October 2018 and conducted jointly by Network of Women in Media, India (NWMI) and Gender at Work, was filled by 456 respondents (including cis women, transwomen and gender fluid individuals working in print, electronic, online media, radio, on a full-time, part-time, contract, stringer or freelance basis. It also included journalism educators, trainers and researchers. The survey was filled in English, Hindi, Telugu and Tamil.


Demographic Profile of Survey Participants
• Almost three fourths of the participants (74.34%) were between 21-40 years old.
• More than 70% were full time employees while almost 11% were freelancers.
• 42 % were reporters, 18% were on the copy desk, 14% were editors. Technical (3%), administrative (0.9%) and marketing (2%) made up a small percentage of the sample.


Caution: Men at Work
• More than a third of the participants, 36%, reported having experienced sexual harassment at the workplace.
• The most common forms were sexist comments, sexual jokes, embarrassing gestures or body language, attempts to establish unwanted romantic and/ or sexual relationships, pestering for dates.
• Implied rewards, accompanied by mistreatment because of refusal to engage in sexual behaviour, were also reported.
• Unwanted touching, fondling, sexual assault and rape were also reported.


Redressal Mechanisms: Far to Go
• More than 60% of the participants said that their organisations had a policy to prevent and redress sexual harassment. A significant number, 28%, was not aware of the existence of such mechanisms. Only 11% said that there was no such mechanism in their workplaces.
• Of those that had policies, 65% said that the policy clearly outlined the process of registering a complaint, while 25% said they were unaware.
• Significantly, only 47% participants said that their workplaces had an Internal Committee to deal with complaints, and almost a third, 30%, were not aware. A small percent (10%) said it existed in the headquarters, but not at their work location.
• More than a fourth were unaware if the IC was headed by a woman, or whether half the members were women, or had an external female expert as mandated by law. Almost half the respondents were unaware of how the IC was constituted.
• Only about a third of the participants, 35%, felt that the IC handled complaints in a fair and unbiased manner.
• More than half, 53% of those who had been sexually harassed at work, did not report it anywhere.
• Of those who approached an IC with a complaint, 59% were not satisfied with the outcome. Only 6% were completely satisfied with the outcome.
• Of those who did not approach the IC with their complaint, the largest number, 47%, was of those who did not have faith in the process.
• Those who did not formally report having been sexually harassed, shared the incident with their colleagues (58%) or friends (53%).
• In a positive step, almost 37% participants reported that the IC took up complaints of freelancers, stringers and correspondents.


Towards Safer Workplaces: Broader Vision Required
• As regards prevention and promoting harmonious workplaces, more than half, 54%, had never attended any sessions of awareness-raising around sexual harassment at their workplaces.
• Only 29% participants reported that their organisations had overall gender policies, or diversity and inclusion policies.
• That employers were failing to take proactive steps to address systemic sexual harassment is apparent, with 38% participants reporting that their workplaces did not hold workshops and trainings; or include sexual harassment as a misconduct in service rules; or distribute pamphlets, display posters, or hold online courses to raise awareness.


The Work Ahead
With only a little over half the survey participants, 52%, reporting that they felt safe at work, 36% reporting that they felt ‘somewhat safe’ and 12% reporting feeling “not safe at all”, clearly, a lot remains to be done to change the atmosphere at media workplaces. While strengthening redressal mechanisms in terms of compliance with the law has been highlighted as an area of intervention, the work of prevention, raising awareness and addressing toxic masculinity at the workplace will need to be embraced as a necessary requirement at all workplaces. The lack of awareness of redressal mechanisms and how they function is a sign of the lack of seriousness with which these measures are implemented.


The lack of faith in the Internal Committees and dissatisfaction with outcomes of these procedures is a telling comment on the fact that these measures are not yet seen as effective or women-friendly. Justice for victim-survivors of sexual harassment at work still seems elusive. The media industry, while calling out sexual harassment in other spheres, must look within and set its house right.


*Laxmi Murthy and Ragamalika Karthikeyan are with the NWMI and Aayushi Agarwal and Sudarshana Kundu are with Gender at Work.


This piece appeared as part of the NWMI Souvenir 2019