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| The report noted that many victims were speaking up thanks to the global spread of the #MeToo movement |
The world's largest survey of sexual harassment in the legal profession has found one in three women said they had suffered abuse from their bosses and colleagues.
The report
published on Wednesday by the London-based International Bar Association (IBA)
also found that 75 percent of victims who reported abuse in the survey did not
speak up and file complaints at work.
Half did so
for "fear of repercussions" or because the perpetrator was someone
more senior.
The global
sexual harassment rate among men in the legal profession was reported at around
seven percent.
"I
didn't report it because who believes that a man says no to sex?" a man
from a Swedish law firm said.
The report
noted that many victims were speaking up thanks to the #MeToo movement that
spread globally in response to sexual harassment charges filed against
Hollywood mogul Harvey Weinstein.
The IBA
found that men and women who did report their cases most often felt frustrated
with their employer's response.
"In
three-quarters of sexual harassment cases, the perpetrator was not
sanctioned," the 130-page report said.
"In
more than half of cases, the situation was unchanged or deteriorated."
The report
was based on a survey of 7,000 respondents from 135 countries.
The survey
focused heavily on Western countries and the group said the study may be
under-representing respondents in countries where the subject is either taboo
or where there is limited awareness about it.
This could
make it seem like abuses are most prevalent in "progressive"
countries that speak more openly about sex crimes. It calls this problem a
"perception paradox".
But the IBA
stressed that its analysis remained the most comprehensive global assessment of
sexual harassment in the legal profession ever undertaken.
Abuses are
"driving people away from their workplaces and the profession as a
whole," the IBA said.
"These
findings... cannot be ignored."
The report
noted that many victims were speaking up thanks to the global spread of the
#MeToo movement.

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