Nearly 235 million women worldwide lack legal protections from sexual harassment at work
UCLA’s WORLD Policy Analysis Center publishes new report examining legal protections against sexual harassment and gender discrimination at work.
October 26, 2017
More than one-third of the world’s countries do not have any laws prohibiting sexual harassment at work―leaving nearly 235 million working women without this important protection. Moreover, nearly 82 million working women live in 24 countries that do not have any legal protections against gender-based discrimination in compensation, promotions and/or demotions, or vocational training at work.
Globally, women face sexual harassment, discrimination, and inequality in the workplace on the basis of their gender, and also on the basis of age, social class, race/ethnicity, religion, sexual orientation, gender identity, and disability.
“Gender discrimination in the workplace adversely affects employees and their families, and impedes the economic success of companies and countries,” said Dr. Jody Heymann, founding director of the WORLD Policy Analysis Center (WORLD) and dean of the UCLA Fielding School of Public Health. “And while progress has been made, hundreds of millions of women face discrimination with no recourse, and women in underrepresented groups have the least protections. There are 152 countries that have prohibited discrimination in promotions and/or demotions based on gender, but only 126 countries guarantee protections from discrimination based on both gender and race/ethnicity.”
To understand whether countries are doing enough to prevent sexual harassment and gender discrimination at work, WORLD performed a comprehensive and systematic analysis of national laws and policies related to sexual harassment and employment discrimination in all 193 countries that are members of the United Nations. The result is WORLD’s just-released report, Preventing Gender-Based Workplace Discrimination and Harassment: New Data on 193 Countries, which provides detailed information on prohibition of sexual harassment at work and protections from discrimination across equal pay, training, promotions and/or demotions.
Preventing sexual harassment and discrimination against women at work—how are the world’s countries faring?
IS SEXUAL HARASSMENT EXPLICITY PROHIBITED IN THE WORKPLACE?
Legal gaps in legislation leave too many women vulnerable to sexual harassment during the workday: more than one-third of the world’s countries (68) do not have any workplace-specific prohibitions of sexual harassment in place.
IS EQUAL PAY GUARANTEED FOR MEN AND WOMEN?
Only 87 of the world’s 193 countries guarantee equal pay for work of equal value on the basis of gender.
Twenty-five countries do not extend any explicit protection from discrimination in workplace compensation.
ARE WOMEN PROTECTED FROM DISCRIMINATION IN PROMOTIONS AND/OR DEMOTIONS?
Globally, 152 countries take an approach to prohibiting gender-based discrimination at work in promotions or demotions.
ARE WOMEN OF ALL RACES/ETHNICITIES PROTECTED FROM DISCRIMINATION IN PROMOTIONS AND/OR DEMOTIONS?
There are 126 countries that protect from discrimination in promotions and/or demotions based on both gender and race/ethnicity.
An additional 28 countries extend protection from workplace discrimination on the basis of gender or race/ethnicity, but not both.
ARE LGBT WORKERS PROTECTED FROM DISCRIMINATION IN PROMOTIONS AND/OR DEMOTIONS?
Only 16 of the world’s countries extend a protection from discrimination at work on the basis of both sexual orientation and gender identity (Albania, Australia, Belgium, Czech Republic, Finland, France, Hungary, Liberia, Luxembourg, Malta, Norway, Portugal, Serbia, Slovakia, Sweden, and the United Kingdom).
The vast majority of countries (136) do not take any approach to prohibiting discrimination in promotions and/or demotions on the basis of sexual orientation or gender identity.
Although partial protections from gender-based discrimination and sexual harassment at work are found in a majority of nations, WORLD’s findings reveal the need for countries to add and strengthen laws to ensure a safe and supportive work environment for all.
“It’s critical for all nations to have, and effectively enforce, laws that specifically protect against sexual harassment and discrimination in the workplace,” Heymann said. “At the same time, recent events in the U.S. serve as an important reminder that even with laws in place, we will only make enough progress when all people and all institutions contribute to changing norms and practices.”
The WORLD Policy Analysis Center (WORLD), based at the University of California, Los Angeles, is under the leadership of Dr. Jody Heymann, Founding Director and Dean of the UCLA Fielding School of Public Health. The goal of the WORLD is to improve the quantity and quality of comparative data available to policymakers, citizens, civil society, and researchers around the world on policies affecting equity, development, human health, and well-being. WORLD is committed to making its broad, globally comparative findings publicly accessible to inform and encourage improvements in legal and policy frameworks worldwide, allow nations to learn from the approaches taken in other countries, facilitate studies of the feasibility and effectiveness of laws and policies in critical areas, and support global and local civil society in their efforts to hold decision-makers accountable.
The UCLA Fielding School of Public Health, founded in 1961, is dedicated to enhancing the public's health by conducting innovative research, training future leaders and health professionals from diverse backgrounds, translating research into policy and practice, and serving our local communities and the communities of the nation and the world. The school has 650 students from more than 25 nations engaged in carrying out the vision of building healthy futures in greater Los Angeles, California, the nation and the world.