TY - JOUR PY - 1999// TI - Routine Activities and Sexual Harassment in the Workplace JO - Work and occupations A1 - de Coster, Stacy A1 - Estes, Sarah Beth A1 - Mueller, Charles W. SP - 21 EP - 49 VL - 26 IS - 1 N2 - This article draws from criminological research on victimization and on organizational models of the social context of sexual harassment to propose a routine activities explanation of sexual harassment victimization. The authors propose that certain features of organizations can be used to conceptualize guardianship and the proximity component of target suitability in the routine activities framework. The authors also discuss the features of individuals (target attractiveness) that may make them more or less susceptible to victimization, provided that the organizational context is held constant. They test hypotheses from a routine activities explanation of sexual harassment using data from a national company in the U.S. telephone industry. The authors find general support for the importance of both organizational features and individual characteristics in the prediction of sexual harassment victimization. However, they find little evidence that individual characteristics and organizational features create harassment victimization, which is counter to a routine activities approach. (Abstract Adapted from Source: Work and Occupations, 1999. Copyright © 1999 by SAGE Publications) Routine Activities Sexual Harassment Causes Sexual Harassment Victim Female Victim Adult Female Adult Victim Workplace Sexual Harassment Violence Against Women Victim Characteristics Victimization Causes 10-04

LA - SN - 0730-8884 UR - http://dx.doi.org/ ID - ref1 ER -