Making More of #MeToo
In observance of聽Women鈥s History Month, 国产视频 is revisiting stories that illuminate important conversations鈥攁nd move them forward. This article聽originally appeared聽in Edition 189 of the聽国产视频 Weekly.
The United States is experiencing a critical cultural reckoning, one in which survivors of sexual abuse aren鈥檛 only being recognized; they鈥檙e also, for the most part, being believed. But the聽聽of high-profile men in media doesn鈥檛 necessarily signal that the industry is becoming a more equitable place for all women, especially those who aren鈥檛 white, wealthy, or privileged with a spotlight. When it comes to addressing sexual assault and harassment within media, the #MeToo campaign has blown the cover off the pool and exposed something that will require more effort to resolve: a fetid foundation that鈥檚 historically devalued women and their work.
Many of the recent scandals have underscored the galling reality that revelations of gender-based abuse and harassment weren鈥檛, really, revelations after all. NPR聽聽that an employee filed a complaint against Michael Oreskes, formerly the senior vice president for news at NPR, in 2015, and that two other employees approached the human resources department about his behavior. Over at聽The New Republic, former literary editor Leon Wieseltier鈥檚 behavior was聽, and even documented, for years. And movie mogul Harvey Weinstein鈥檚 abuses weren鈥檛 just whispered; they were聽鈥攁nd joked about鈥攊n entertainment circles.
In response to allegations and abuses, some media companies have聽聽sexual harassment and diversity trainings. Some have also suggested that they鈥檒l review HR policies, or聽they鈥檝e聽taken punitive action, such as聽. But what can be done, on a deeper level, to change the systemic behaviors that allow abuse to occur with impunity?
A possible first step is understanding the contexts in which sexual abuse and harassment can flourish. A聽, which included 10,000 men in six countries across the Asia-Pacific, found that the most common motivation for rape, cited by men, was a sense of special entitlement: 70-80 percent of surveyed men who had raped women had done so because of their 鈥渂elief that they had the right to sex regardless of consent.鈥 Additional research suggests that sexual aggression stems from聽聽of belief systems, behaviors, and perceptions that occur in a situation or environment that predisposes men to act on those beliefs. Several studies, including research from a聽聽on cross-cultural intersections of sexual violence against women, have found that 鈥渟exual violence is likely to occur more commonly in cultures that foster beliefs of perceived male superiority and social and cultural inferiority of women.鈥
In sum, sexual harassment and assault happen because some people鈥攎ostly men鈥攂elieve that they have a right to do it, and their behavior is frequently cultivated by cultures and communities that, both explicitly and implicitly, condone their abuse.
Yet understanding individual behavior, on its own, isn鈥檛 enough. Another way to move the needle of progress, I suggest, is for media companies to invest in conducting gender audits, which would allow companies to understand structures and power imbalances and devise actions to fuel more equality. A gender audit would elicit information about where power exists and who wields it, and then provide an action plan for addressing gender and other forms of inequality at all organizational levels. A gender audit would be tailored to each company, but ultimately it鈥檇 design and utilize a process to identify and expose the ways an organization鈥檚 culture and structure鈥攁nd the individuals within it鈥攃ontribute to dynamics that allow abuse to occur.
A gender audit might start with a review of organizational policies and basic representation, and ask questions like these: What is the sexual harassment policy? Are there clear, anonymous mechanisms for reporting? Are women receiving equal pay? Are there ample parental leave and flexible work policies for parents? Is there a gender differentiation in the numbers of women in senior leadership positions, or on staff? What kinds of jobs do women do at the company (put differently, are certain jobs, 鈥渇eminized鈥?), and are there clear tracks for advancement for everyone? These latter questions might not seem entirely relevant to sexual abuse, but they are: An organization that doesn鈥檛 explicitly value women鈥檚 work and lives fuels a culture in which women are marked as inferior, only stoking the potential for abusive behavior.
But this rigorous organizational soul-searching doesn鈥檛 stop there. Through confidential interviews and surveys, and by observing meetings and daily office life, a gender audit would also investigate things like who controls hiring and firing, who gets opportunities and who doesn鈥檛, what subtle behaviors or company practices women and men find problematic but don鈥檛 feel that they can talk about, and who gets to speak in meetings and who gets聽.
And finally鈥攃rucially鈥攁 gender audit within a media company would analyze, review, and interrogate the content it produces. Male entitlement is ubiquitous in film and on television, evidenced by a common trope whereby women act as narrative devices for men to achieve some sort of self-fulfillment. Women onscreen often exist聽for聽men, in other words, rather than as fully realized subjects with their own interiority. Why are media companies producing content that reflects a stifling status quo, and how can they break that mold?
This behind-closed-doors investigation would yield recommendations, which would likely focus on supporting staff, especially leadership, to re-write and re-examine their commit to a gender-inclusive company鈥攂oth in policy and in practice.聽聽
Of course, a gender audit wouldn鈥檛 be a panacea. Rather, it鈥檇 be yet another tool鈥攍ike聽, a recent action plan to squash systemic sexual harassment in the workplace via a campaign and a legal defense fund鈥攖hat might help organizations right a long history of wrongs, and to match systemic abuse with systemic solutions. After working for nearly a decade on gender issues for international aid and women鈥檚 human rights organizations, I鈥檝e seen how a combination of cultural and policy change and mindset shifts can add up to make a significant difference. I鈥檝e observed these kinds of projects in a range of locations鈥攆rom Zambia to Egypt to Australia鈥攁nd have seen how, done right, they can work:聽, where I鈥檓 an associate, has developed a process that guides organizations through addressing structures that maintain inequality; and Hollaback has聽聽bystander intervention trainings that media companies can adopt within their organizations to help all staff understand what toxic behaviors look like.
While these are just a couple examples of existing work that media companies can engage with, a recent study聽聽of such work.
The media industry is, in many ways, a cultural arbiter, but its ignorance鈥攁nd, truly, neglect鈥攐f abuse within its own ranks signals the extent to which it has failed in that regard. Change within an organization doesn鈥檛 happen by default when an alleged abuser departs the company; these issues have to be addressed, systematically and rigorously, throughout. However companies opt to face these issues, they ought to do far more than take the cover off the pool. They ought to drain the systems that propped up abusive men in the first place, and provide a just environment for people, of all genders and identities, to do their very best work.