Tuesday, March 9, 2021

Are China’s Companies Taking Action on Sexual Harassment? – The Diplomat



A remarkable aspect of China's new civil code [the tort chapter of which we translated] - effective January 1, 2021- is that it embeds in the basic law the right to be free of sexual harassment.  Darius Longarino of Yale's Paul Tsai China Center, with two colleagues - Yixin Ren and Angela Zhang - advise that change is likely to come slowly.  There's little surprise in that since the concept of a hostile workplace has been slow to find embrace here.  In 1993 in Lehmann v. Toys R Us the New Jersey Supreme Court embraced the concept in an opinion by Justice Marie Garibaldi.  But 27 years later, even after the #MeToo movement, we have a new member of the Supreme Court - Amy Coney Barrett - who is difficult to persuade that a workplace can be called "hostile".  Though Mao Tse Teng famously cited the maxim women hold up half the sky, and despite great progress in the education of women, actualizing that egalitarian sentiment has been slow.  - GWC
Are China’s Companies Taking Action on Sexual Harassment? – The Diplomat
By Darius LongarinoYixin Ren, and Angela Zhang
Are China’s Companies Taking Action on Sexual Harassment?
Credit: Illustration by Catherine Putz

“Are You New on the Job and Have Been Sexually Harassed? The Civil Code’s Got Your Back!” exclaimed a January article by the Beijing Haidian District Court. The court, along with Chinese state media, was joining a wave of online discussion following the depiction of workplace sexual harassment in the hit show “My Best Friend’s Story” (Liu Jin Sui Yue). China’s first-ever Civil Code, which had just gone into effect, the court said, not only provides for civil lawsuits against harassers, but also obliges companies to adopt policies for preventing and responding to sexual harassment in the workplace.

Since 2005, a series of laws and regulations in China have called on employers to address sexual harassment, but few companies have put anti-sexual harassment policies on the books. The Civil Code is the first national law to clearly state that employers have a duty to adopt concrete policies, giving it a stronger combination of authority and specificity than its predecessors. Will it deliver the protections promised?

A previous article in The Diplomat looked at the ongoing legal debate in China about when employees can sue their companies for failing to adopt anti-sexual harassment policies. This time, we asked employees, lawyers, and gender justice advocates whether the Civil Code’s debut has sparked changes on the ground.

Overall, our interviewees said they have not yet observed much, if any, change. “I did not connect the new Civil Code to sexual harassment until now,” said one employee at a large Shenzhen-based technology company. “I have no clue who I would turn to if an issue arose.”

“I hadn’t even heard about it,” responded a manager in Shanghai. Other interviewees echoed a similar sentiment — the Civil Code has not yet catalyzed changes in company policies.

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Although the Civil Code has only been in effect for a short time, lawmakers passed it in May 2020 and the anticipated provisions on sexual harassment were announced more than two years ago. Companies have had notice to get the ball rolling on compliance but have mostly neglected to do so.

Shen Haiyan, a consultant with the Shanghai-based law firm Laboroot, is not surprised by the inaction. “Although the Civil Code provides that companies ‘have a duty,’ [to adopt anti-sexual harassment policies]” she explained, “the forcefulness of ‘have a duty’ and ‘if I don’t do this, then there will be some kind of punishment’ is not the same.”

Professor Shen Yifei, a scholar in Fudan University’s prestigious School of Social Development and Public Policy, agreed: “If a regulation has neither mechanisms for punishment nor incentives, how can it be implemented?” Shen suspects the Civil Code’s lack of clarity on employer liability is the result of “balancing the interests of different groups.” The implication is that lawmakers thought it would be too heavy a burden on businesses to expose them to civil litigation for failing to adopt anti-sexual harassment policies – though other explanations, like drafter oversight, are also plausible.

Some legal scholars have argued that it is more appropriate for enforcement to be left to state agencies rather than employee lawsuits. However, administrative enforcement has a poor track record in protecting labor and employment rights. In Authoritarian Legality in China,” Professor Mary Gallagher observed that “labor inspectorates are woefully understaffed and lack capacity,” can only give companies “slaps on the wrist,” and are “incentivized to look the other way as much as possible.”

Civil litigation has its limitations as well. Successful cases against harassers or employers who discriminate against women are rare and damage awards are low. But opening the courthouse door creates opportunities for individual agency — not only to protect one’s own rights, but also to start public discussions that educate and inspire others. It also shows companies that they can be named and shamed. More broadly, bottom-up pressure, inside and outside the courtroom, can disrupt the status quo. For example, China’s #MeToo movement — even though a target of state censorship and repression — spurred a string of policy responses to sexual harassment.

The lack of incentives for employers to adopt policies is problematic because sexual harassment is not just an individual problem but an institutional one. “Some companies have cultivated bad workplace cultures that let sexual harassment happen,” said a workplace consultant who has facilitated anti-sexual harassment trainings. “Some human resources managers have even encouraged sexual relations between the boss and employees,” she added. One woman told Xinhua’s Ban Yue Tan in an article about the Civil Code that her manager would often bring her to business dinners to sit next to male clients. “Some clients, once they start drinking, they start telling dirty jokes. After that, they start making sexual advances. The manager knows exactly what’s going on, but never says anything.”

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