Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byDarren Dickerson Modified over 9 years ago
2
Plaintiff claimed 40+ instances of sexual conduct occurred with a supervisor over a 3 year period that only ceased when plaintiff began dating a steady boyfriend Sexual conduct was not a condition to obtain or maintain employment or to obtain a promotion Supreme Court held: sexual harassment that leads to a hostile or offensive work environment (HWE) violates Title VII, not just quid pro quo sexual harassment
3
Other key features: ◦ Voluntariness of sexual conduct is not a defense; the issue is whether any alleged sexual advances were unwelcome ◦ Trier of fact must look at the totality of the circumstances—including the nature and context of the sexual advances ◦ Employer not automatically liable for supervisor’s conduct under respondeat superior
4
Plaintiff subjected to gender-based insults and unwanted sexual innuendos Supreme Court held: standard for an actionable hostile work environment— conduct must be severe or pervasive but does not have to lead to injury or psychological harm
5
Male plaintiff subjected to harassment by male supervisors; complaints to supervisors received no response; plaintiff eventually quit Supreme Court held: nothing in Title VII or court precedent excludes same-sex harassment—prior law merely prohibits a hostile work environment
6
Plaintiff subjected to 15 months of constant sexual harassment by a supervisor, refused all sexual advances, and did not report conduct Plaintiff did not suffer any adverse job consequences Supreme Court held: plaintiff could not state quid pro quo claim because no tangible job consequences; employer could be held vicariously liable under HWE claim
7
Plaintiff participated in employer’s internal investigation and reported the multiple instances in which a supervisor had sexually harassed her Plaintiff was subsequently fired Supreme Court held: prohibition against retaliation extended from employees who report workplace discrimination on their own to include employees who report workplace discrimination during an employer’s internal investigation ◦ Participation in internal investigation considered within the “opposition clause” of Title VII’s anti-retaliation provision
8
Plaintiff subjected to profane, sexually explicit language, coworkers’ conversations about sexual activity, and provocative pictures of women displayed in her workplace Fourth Circuit held: critical inquiry is whether the plaintiff’s environment was hostile and not whether conduct was directed at the plaintiff
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.