Managing the phenomenon of Sexual harassment in the manufacturing industry

All companies have strategic assets comprising financial capital, physical capital, human capital and organisational capital which, when effectively utilised, contribute to the competitive advantage necessary to survive in a globalised economy. The manifestation of adverse factors in a company will...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Kölkenbeck-Ruh, Rudolph Karl
Other Authors: Grobler, P.A.
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10500/1556
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-unisa-oai-umkn-dsp01.int.unisa.ac.za-10500-15562016-04-16T04:07:51Z Managing the phenomenon of Sexual harassment in the manufacturing industry Kölkenbeck-Ruh, Rudolph Karl Grobler, P.A. Erasmus, B.J. Increased absenteeism Decreased productivity Psychological and physiological harm Same-sex conduct Sexual harassment "Hostile work environment" harassment "Quid pro quo" harassment Proposed sexual harassment model Sexual harassment policy 658.31450968 Sexual harassment -- South Africa -- Management Psychological abuse -- South Africa -- Management Manufacturing industries -- South Africa All companies have strategic assets comprising financial capital, physical capital, human capital and organisational capital which, when effectively utilised, contribute to the competitive advantage necessary to survive in a globalised economy. The manifestation of adverse factors in a company will impact detrimentally on the performance of these strategic assets. Since the 1980s, one factor has become prominent in the management of a company’s human capital, namely sexual harassment. Sexual harassment constitutes behaviour of a sexual nature that leads to, and perpetuates, a working environment in which it becomes unpleasant to work, and if allowed to go unchecked, will lead to the underperformance of the company’s human capital. Besides the cost of litigation associated with sexual harassment, companies are confronted with the more troubling and subtle costs arising out of the psychological and physiological harm to both victims and co-workers. The psychological and physiological effects manifest themselves in symptoms such as depression, frustration, decreased self-esteem and fatigue which, in turn, lead to decreased productivity and increased absenteeism. Accordingly, in an effort to gain the competitive advantage to survive in a globalised economy, companies must manage the phenomenon of sexual harassment in the workplace. The existing theoretical principles relating to the management of sexual harassment in the workplace have been analysed in depth and a model developed to satisfy this need. This model was subsequently used to determine to what extent sexual harassment management is taking place within companies affiliated to the Steel and Engineering Industries Federation of South Africa (SEIFSA). Various informative findings resulted from the investigation, amongst which were the lack of a proper sexual harassment policy within companies, the lack of proper training of employees regarding the occurrence of this phenomenon in the workplace, and the absence of proper formal/informal complaints procedures. It thus became evident that the management of sexual harassment in these companies – despite the Government’s Code of Good Practice on the Handling of Sexual Harassment Cases – had not been fully established and that there is a need for guidelines in this regard. Business Management D. Comm. (Business Management) 2009-08-25T10:54:21Z 2009-08-25T10:54:21Z 2009-08-25T10:54:21Z 2003-06-30 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10500/1556 en 1 online resource (various pagings)
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Increased absenteeism
Decreased productivity
Psychological and physiological harm
Same-sex conduct
Sexual harassment
"Hostile work environment" harassment
"Quid pro quo" harassment
Proposed sexual harassment model
Sexual harassment policy
658.31450968
Sexual harassment -- South Africa -- Management
Psychological abuse -- South Africa -- Management
Manufacturing industries -- South Africa
spellingShingle Increased absenteeism
Decreased productivity
Psychological and physiological harm
Same-sex conduct
Sexual harassment
"Hostile work environment" harassment
"Quid pro quo" harassment
Proposed sexual harassment model
Sexual harassment policy
658.31450968
Sexual harassment -- South Africa -- Management
Psychological abuse -- South Africa -- Management
Manufacturing industries -- South Africa
Kölkenbeck-Ruh, Rudolph Karl
Managing the phenomenon of Sexual harassment in the manufacturing industry
description All companies have strategic assets comprising financial capital, physical capital, human capital and organisational capital which, when effectively utilised, contribute to the competitive advantage necessary to survive in a globalised economy. The manifestation of adverse factors in a company will impact detrimentally on the performance of these strategic assets. Since the 1980s, one factor has become prominent in the management of a company’s human capital, namely sexual harassment. Sexual harassment constitutes behaviour of a sexual nature that leads to, and perpetuates, a working environment in which it becomes unpleasant to work, and if allowed to go unchecked, will lead to the underperformance of the company’s human capital. Besides the cost of litigation associated with sexual harassment, companies are confronted with the more troubling and subtle costs arising out of the psychological and physiological harm to both victims and co-workers. The psychological and physiological effects manifest themselves in symptoms such as depression, frustration, decreased self-esteem and fatigue which, in turn, lead to decreased productivity and increased absenteeism. Accordingly, in an effort to gain the competitive advantage to survive in a globalised economy, companies must manage the phenomenon of sexual harassment in the workplace. The existing theoretical principles relating to the management of sexual harassment in the workplace have been analysed in depth and a model developed to satisfy this need. This model was subsequently used to determine to what extent sexual harassment management is taking place within companies affiliated to the Steel and Engineering Industries Federation of South Africa (SEIFSA). Various informative findings resulted from the investigation, amongst which were the lack of a proper sexual harassment policy within companies, the lack of proper training of employees regarding the occurrence of this phenomenon in the workplace, and the absence of proper formal/informal complaints procedures. It thus became evident that the management of sexual harassment in these companies – despite the Government’s Code of Good Practice on the Handling of Sexual Harassment Cases – had not been fully established and that there is a need for guidelines in this regard. === Business Management === D. Comm. (Business Management)
author2 Grobler, P.A.
author_facet Grobler, P.A.
Kölkenbeck-Ruh, Rudolph Karl
author Kölkenbeck-Ruh, Rudolph Karl
author_sort Kölkenbeck-Ruh, Rudolph Karl
title Managing the phenomenon of Sexual harassment in the manufacturing industry
title_short Managing the phenomenon of Sexual harassment in the manufacturing industry
title_full Managing the phenomenon of Sexual harassment in the manufacturing industry
title_fullStr Managing the phenomenon of Sexual harassment in the manufacturing industry
title_full_unstemmed Managing the phenomenon of Sexual harassment in the manufacturing industry
title_sort managing the phenomenon of sexual harassment in the manufacturing industry
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/10500/1556
work_keys_str_mv AT kolkenbeckruhrudolphkarl managingthephenomenonofsexualharassmentinthemanufacturingindustry
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