Women984 Archivesgirls are enduring street harassment "so frequently" that it is normalised to become "a routine part of everyday life," a new government report has found.
MPs on the Women and Equalities Committee investigated the issue of street harassment over the course of nine months and found that "relentless" harassment (which can begin during childhood) results in girls growing up with a normalised culture of harassment. The report also found that the "disrespect of women" and the "assumption by some men that they can behave in this way" are factors underpinning harassment.
SEE ALSO: #MeToo has sparked a big shift in attitudes towards harassment, new research showsThe report outlines the consequences of harassment for women and girls — in particular, "the backlash they often receive if they 'reject' unwanted approaches."
"Women and girls often fear and experience retaliation from men and boys perpetrating sexual harassment," the report states. The report made note of the fact that several women "asked for their submissions of evidence to us not to be published because of fear of retaliation."
One case study detailed a woman's experience in which a group of men "made sexualised comments" and asked her to "come and sit with them." After ignoring them and putting her headphones in, a note was passed to her. "Eventually a note landed in my lap which read: ‘when you get off this bus we will rape you.’ I got off at the busiest stop possible and went into a shop until I was sure they hadn’t followed me," states the report. This fear of being raped was listed as one of the impacts of street harassment on women and girls.
The report also explores the "significant and widespread impacts" of sexual harassment on individuals and wider society.
"Sexual harassment in public reduces women and girls’ freedom to enjoy public life, and can negatively affect feelings of safety, bodily autonomy and mental health," reads the report. "It helps to keep women and girls unequal by perpetuating a culture in which they are sexualised; it is the backdrop to a society in which sexual violence can be normalised or excused."
"It is not acceptable that women have to change their behaviour to avoid sexual harassment."
Another impact detailed in the report was that harassment can make girls feel that they "do not control their bodies in public spaces and that they are seen as sexual objects."
Chair of the Women and Equalities Committee, Maria Miller MP, said it is "unacceptable" that women and girls should have to "change their behaviour" to avoid harassment in public places.
"It can make women and girls scared and stressed, avoid certain routes home at night or certain train carriages, wear headphones while out running; women feel the onus is put on them to avoid 'risky' situations," Miller said in a statement. "It is not acceptable that women have to change their behaviour to avoid sexual harassment."
"The #MeToo movement shows that we must confront some deeply uncomfortable truths about our society and the attitudes some men hold," Miller continued.
She added that "laws alone" can't change the "cultural acceptability" of sexual harassment and that public transport operators, local authorities, and universities must make changes too.
The report made recommendations for tackling sexual harassment in public places. One such guideline was for train and bus operators to be required through franchise agreements to have a "robust policy" on sexual harassment.
Another was that universities should have "a legal obligation" to put policies in place "outlawing sexual harassment."
"Public places must be made safe for all women and girls," Miller continued.
Omelets, Jams, Enemas, and Other Ways to Get It UpThe internet documents a British monarch's death — for the first timeThese emoji are the most flirtatious, misunderstood, and communicativeMicrosoft Excel finally lets you disable aggressive autoWhy Diane di Prima Went to San FranciscoHilary Mantel: “The Internet Keeps Regurgitating You”Inside the movement redefining and resisting professionalismTikTok trend parodies famous songs with cringe Gen Z slangWhat's in a title? Why King Charles III isn't George VIIPigeons Can (Kind of) Learn to ReadQueen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom has died aged 96Time Speeds Up: Paintings by Amy BennettApple announces Oct. 30 Mac event called 'Scary Fast'Flooded PenthouseBefriending George PlimptonChris Bachelder’s ‘The Throwback Special’ Nominated for National Book AwardLiving with Volcanoes in the Caribbean IslandsApple announces Oct. 30 Mac event called 'Scary Fast'Omelets, Jams, Enemas, and Other Ways to Get It UpThe Role of the Poet: An Interview with Solmaz Sharif Hoda Kotb is named new co The iPhone X may not be selling as well as Apple hoped LG's new 88 What sparked the 'bomb cyclone'? A huge temperature contrast was key $1.3 million vodka which appeared in 'House of Cards' stolen from bar The three biggest films of 2017 were all about women Apple says it broke another big App Store record on New Year's Day Intel CEO is under fire for selling $39 million in stock Buffalo Bills fans donate $60,000 to an opposing team's charity I can't get enough of people making music out of other people speaking The time has come for Mark Zuckerberg to reveal his 2018 personal challenge Google's new "Fuchsia" OS now available for Pixelbook and Chromebooks It's snowing in the South and people are losing their damn minds Lenovo unveils nine new ThinkPad laptops ahead of CES 2018 Meryl Streep says Melania and Ivanka Trump should speak out on #MeToo Google says new Google Calendar will officially replace old version The iMac Pro is tough to repair but has vastly improved cooling Live TV news anchor handles fire alarm in the most British way possible improve your online dating profile Nicole Kidman tells Andy Cohen to move on from that one time she clapped weirdly
1.6697s , 10131.7265625 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【1984 Archives】,Miracle Information Network