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How to Win Hearts and Minds: Corporate Compliance Policies for Sexual Harassment
Author(s) -
Parker Christine
Publication year - 1999
Publication title -
law and policy
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.534
H-Index - 45
eISSN - 1467-9930
pISSN - 0265-8240
DOI - 10.1111/1467-9930.00064
Subject(s) - harassment , compliance (psychology) , sanctions , public relations , deterrence theory , corporation , corporate governance , business , incentive , position (finance) , normative , commercial law , best practice , corporate law , political science , law , economics , finance , psychology , social psychology , microeconomics
Australian law provides incentives and encouragement for companies to develop their own sexual harassment policies. This paper reports on interviews with equal opportunity officers in Australia’s financial services industry responsible for best practice sexual harassment policies. Their experiences evoke three scholarly critiques of corporate compliance as a regulatory strategy: (1) that corporate compliance programs are a means by which employees’ lives are regimented and controlled by corporate governmentality, (2) or, even worse, that private management priorities subvert the principles of public‐regarding law while appearing to implement them, and (3) that even where law has some effect, regulatory strategies aimed at producing self‐regulatory compliance will provide insufficient deterrence to effect real change. The data however also show that the best of these best practice officers have themselves created complex strategies to resolve tensions between law and management, corporate goals, and normative pressures. In doing so, they have had to combine their personal, professional, and corporate commitments to “win hearts and minds” to antiharassment values by co‐opting management resources to compliance goals through strategic appeals to both “business case” arguments and the specter of public sanctions. This project of cooption depends on their own position and “clout” within the corporation.

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