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How do people perceive sexual harassment targeting transgender women, lesbians, and straight cisgender women?
Author(s) -
Jennifer L. Mezzapelle,
Anna Reiman
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
journal of experimental psychology applied
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.004
H-Index - 84
eISSN - 1939-2192
pISSN - 1076-898X
DOI - 10.1037/xap0000361
Subject(s) - harassment , sexual orientation , psychology , transgender , lesbian , social psychology , sexual identity , prejudice (legal term) , sexual minority , psycinfo , identity (music) , perception , human sexuality , gender studies , political science , sociology , medline , physics , neuroscience , acoustics , psychoanalysis , law
Third-party observers' opinions affect how organizations handle sexual harassment. Prior research has focused on perceptions of sexual harassment targeting straight cisgender women. We examined how targets' sexual orientation and gender identity impact these perceptions. In three preregistered studies, straight cisgender participants imagined a coworker confided that a male colleague had sexually harassed her. The target was a transgender woman, a lesbian woman, or a woman whose sexual orientation and gender identity were unspecified. In Study 1 ( N = 428), participants reported believing that sexual harassment targeting lesbians and women with unspecified identities was most likely motivated by attraction and power, whereas sexual harassment targeting transgender women was seen as most likely motivated by power and prejudice. Despite these differences in perceived motivation, in Study 2 ( N = 421) perceptions of appropriate consequences for the perpetrator did not vary based on the target's identity. Study 3 ( N = 473) demonstrated that the specific behavior of which sexual harassment is assumed to consist differs based on the target's identity. Whereas women with unspecified identities and lesbians were assumed to face stereotypical attraction-based harassment, transgender women were assumed to face gender harassment. Stereotypes about sexual harassment can bias third-party assumptions, invalidating experiences that do not match pervasive stereotypes. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved).

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