Street harassment

Street harassment is a form of harassment, primarily sexual harassment that consists of unwanted comments, gestures, honking, wolf-whistlings, catcalling, exposure, following, persistent sexual advances, and touching by strangers in public areas such as streets, shopping malls, and public transportation.[1]

According to an article by the non-profit organization Stop Street Harassment, street harassment does not only include actions or comments that have a sexual connotation.[2] Street harassment can include homophobic and transphobic slurs, and other hateful comments referencing race, religion, class, and disability.[2] Harassment can also include persistent requests for someone's name, number, destination, or other personal information after the victim has already denied requests, as well as public masturbation and flashing.[2] Stop Street Harassment states that someone could be harassed for multiple different reasons within the same instance of harassment.[2] The practice of street harassment is rooted in power and control and is often a reflection of societal discrimination.[2]

According to some scholars, street harassment is defined as street “remarks” where the word harassment loses its connotation of violence, and it is considered to be blunt to recipients.[3] According to the founder of the non-profit organization Stop Street Harassment, it can also consist of physically harmless behavior, such as "kissing noises" and "non-sexually explicit comments," to "more threatening behavior" like stalking, flashing, sexual assault, and rape.[4]

Recipients include people of all genders, but women are much more commonly victims of harassment by men. According to Harvard Law Review (1993), street harassment is considered harassment done primarily by male strangers to females in public places.[5] In 2014, researchers from Cornell University and Hollaback! conducted the largest international cross-cultural study on street harassment. The data suggests that the majority of females have their first street harassment experience during puberty.[6] According to Stop Street Harassment, “In 2014, nationally representative survey of street harassment in the USA, half of the harassed persons were harassed by age 17.”[2] They also state that, “In an informal international online 2008 study of 811 women conducted by Stop Street Harassment, almost 1 in 4 women had experienced street harassment by age 12 (7th grade) and nearly 90% by age 19”.[2]

Cultural factors are flexible; therefore, different nationalities can have different reactions regarding street harassment.[7] In much of South Asia, public sexual harassment of women is called "eve teasing". The Spanish term piropos most widely used in Mexico holds a similar effect. Studies show that what is considered street harassment is similar around the globe.[8] Many perpetrators of these actions would not characterize them as harassment, though most recipients would. Hostile environments can be interpreted differently depending on cultural norms. Studies show that the US holds “discriminatory nature” views, whereas Europe holds “violation of individual dignity” meaning that the United States focuses on the prejudiced side of harassment and Europe focuses on the invasion of personal space. In the bigger picture, the US tends to emphasize social rules, and Europe highlights the ethical and moral elements of street harassment. Cross-Cultural research of sexual harassment puts individualist countries such as United States, Canada, Germany and Netherlands in comparison to collectivist countries such as Ecuador, Pakistan, Turkey, the Philippines, and Taiwan. As a result, individualist countries are more likely to be susceptible and offended to sexual harassment than collectivist countries. Brazilians see sexual tendencies as an innocent, friendly and harmless romantic behavior compared to how Americans view it as a form of aggression, hierarchy, and abuse.[7] Harassment can also be disproportionately directed at those with what is perceived by passers-by as a non-typical gender identity or sexual orientation.[9]

Taking photos of strangers without permission, as street photography and photojournalism practitioners do, is not considered street harassment.[10]

History

There is no definitive beginning of street harassment, but the discussion regarding the subject began in 1944 with the rape of Recy Taylor. Rosa Parks was commissioned to investigate the crime in which Taylor, a black woman, was kidnapped and gang-raped in Abbeville, Alabama. Parks responded by starting what was later dubbed the "strongest campaign for equal justice to be seen in a decade."[11]

In the 1960s and 1970s, a movement called Take Back the Night gained traction. This movement, still strongly represented today, is an international protest against sexual violence against women. Take Back the Night has become a non-profit organization that aims to end all forms of sexual violence, including street harassment.[12]

In 1970, the "Wall Street Ogle-In" took place. Led by Karla Jay, women marched on Wall Street with signs addressing street harassment. As a role reversal, the women catcalled the men they passed in hopes of raising awareness of the unpleasant nature of the street harassment women experience daily.[13]

In 1994, Deirdre Davis wrote an academic article that helped clarify what street harassment is by explaining its five characteristics: 1) it takes place in a public space, 2) it most commonly occurs between men and women, 3) saying "thank you" to a harasser provokes further harassment, 4) comments often pertain to what cannot be seen on the woman's body, and 5) the harasser's comments, though disguised as compliments, are objectifying and derogatory.[14]

In 2012, the blog Stop Street Harassment became a non-profit that is "dedicated to documenting and ending gender-based street harassment worldwide" by hosting events and keeping people informed about the action they can take to end street harassment.[15]

Prevalence

There is a high prevalence for street harassment to become sexual violence. Worldwide, statistics show that 80% of women endure at least frequent street harassment, 45% feel that they cannot go alone to public spaces, 50% have to cross the street to find alternate routes to their destinations, 26% claim that they are in a relationship in order to avoid harassment, 80% feel the need to be constantly alert when traversing local streets and 19% have had to switch careers to escape the area in which harassment occurred.[16] This problem is not only transnational, but also transcultural and affects people of all identities, races, and ages—everyday.[17]

The Canadian government sponsored a large survey in 1993 called the Violence Against Women Survey. In the sample of over 12,000 women, 85% said they were victims of harassment by a stranger.[18] In a 2002 survey of Beijing residents, 58% cited public buses as a common location for sexual harassment.[19]

A study done in Australia shows that almost 90% of women have experienced verbal or physical harassment in public one or more times in their lives. In Afghanistan, research done in the same year indicates that the prevalence of harassment was 93%. Canadian and Egyptian studies show that the rate of incidence is approximately 85% of women experiencing street harassment in the past year. In U.S.-based research, it was reported that women experienced stranger harassment on a monthly basis (41%), while a large minority reported experiencing harassment once every few days (31%). These statistics are given to show a sense of the phenomenon as widely construed, not taken as representative of the same phenomenon comparable across contexts.[20]

United States

A representative survey of 2,000 Americans was commissioned in 2014 by activist group Stop Street Harassment and conducted by GfK. 25% of men and 65% of women reported having been the victims of street harassment in their lives. 41% of women and 16% of men said they had been physically harassed in some way, such as by being followed, flashed, or groped.[21] The perpetrators are lone men in 70% of cases for female victims and 48% of cases for male victims; 20% of men who were harassed were the victims of a lone woman.[21] For men, the most common harassment was homophobic or transphobic slurs, followed by unwanted following, then catcalling and comments on body parts. For women, the most common harassment was catcalling, followed by comments on body parts, unwanted touching or brushing up against, and then sexual slurs like "bitch" or "slut".[21]

For women, most harassment is performed by a total stranger. This comes from a 1990s study from the American Midwest. It was found that numerous women have experienced street harassment on numerous occasions. Another 50% were physically harassed or followed by such strangers. Half of those surveyed revealed this harassment occurred by their 17th birthday.[22]

Egypt

A 2008 survey found that 83% of Egyptian women said they had experienced sexual harassment, as did 98% of women from overseas while in Egypt.[24]:16 A 2013 study in Egypt by UN Women found that 99.3% of female respondents said they had been sexually harassed.[25]

Five hundred cases of mass sexual assault in Egypt were documented between June 2012 and June 2014.[23]

Minorities in the United States

Street harassment is the embodiment of societal discrimination through power and control.  Minorities, particularly women and individuals of color, experience an added layer of oppression.  According to scholars, when African-American women are harassed on the street, the experience evokes a long history of disrespect, degradation, and inhumane sexual mistreatment to which Black women have been subjected over the years. Black women may, in fact, suffer more intensely from street harassment than other women, because it resonates with remnants of a slave-era mentality.[26]  Similarly, for women of color who have been historically objectified, exoticized, deemed sexually available, and commodified, harassers feel they are free to access their physical bodies.[27] Systemic racism of class further bolsters the power imbalance where individuals from lower-income backgrounds are particularly targeted given that lower socioeconomic classes have historically been treated as ‘less than’ or have been perceived as sexually available, or at the mercy of those from a higher socioeconomic class.[27]  Similarly, religious minorities encounter different levels of harassment, which can also be tied to other identities including gender, race and ethnicity.[27]  Additionally, minorities face increased harassment that is likelier to escalate to threats and rape or even murder.

LGBT community

66% of LGBT respondents in a 2012 European Union survey said that they avoid holding hands in public for fear of harassment and assault. 50% said they avoid certain places or locations, and the places they listed as most unsafe to be open about their sexual orientations were "public transport" and "street, square, car parking lot, or other public space."[28]

According to the Stop Street Harassment national survey, LGBT men are 17% more likely to experience physically aggressive harassment and 20% more likely to encounter verbal harassment than heterosexual men.[29] In a separate survey, verbal harassment was cited as the most common form of abuse.[30] However, there were also a significant number of people who were harassed by being denied service or being physically harassed.[31]

Research from Patrick McNeil at George Washington University in 2014 showed that 90% of participants in his survey of gay and bisexual men said that they felt “unwelcome in public because of their sexual orientation.”[32] 73% said that they experienced specific homophobic and biphobic comments targeted towards them in the past year. Almost 70% reported that by age 19 they had experienced “negative public interactions”, and 90% said that they had experienced these negative interactions by age 24. As a result of this street harassment, some people in the LGBTQ+ community experience large impacts on their lives. 5% of the group surveyed said that they had moved to different neighborhoods in response to interactions they had experienced, and 3% reported a change in job in response to being harassed in the area of their job.[32]

In a national survey in the United States done by the Human Rights Campaign, women were found to be more likely to experience street harassment, and 60% of women reported being harassed at some point in their lives. “Among LGBT youth, 51 percent have been verbally harassed at school, compared to 25 percent among non-LGBT students."[33]

Researchers found in a Harvard study published in 2017[34] that in a group of 489 LGBTQ+ Americans, 57% of them had been subject to slurs. It was also found that 53% of those surveyed had experienced offensive comments. In addition to this, most of those surveyed mentioned a friend or family member who was also a part of the LGBTQ+ community that had been harassed. 57% said their friend or family member was threatened or harassed, 51% said their friend or family member had been sexually harassed, and 51% reported that they had someone in their lives who had experienced physical violence as a result of their sexuality or gender. This study also found that LGBTQ+ people of color are twice as likely to be harassed on the street or in other contexts than their white counterparts.[35]

A sample survey of 331 LGBTQ men in 2014 indicated the phenomena occurs worldwide. 90% of them claimed to be harassed in public spaces for their perceived differences. It was mainly their lack of traditionally masculine features that singled them out for abuse. This abuse was mainly aimed at how they did not fit typical gender roles while in public.[36]

Effects of street harassment

Physical responses, physical safety, emotional reactions, and psychological symptoms are the effects of street harassment. Physical effects can also be discussed in terms of the physical safety of a woman. Recipients of harassment describe physical symptoms as muscle tension, having trouble breathing, dizziness, and nausea.[37]  Street harassment evokes from its targets emotional responses that range from moderate annoyance to intense fear. Two themes repeatedly appear in women's responses to inquiries about the experience of harassment: the intrusion upon privacy and the fear of rape.[26]  Some scholars deem that comments and conduct of a harasser reduce women to sexual objects and force this perception upon his target.[26]  Harassment may also teach women to be ashamed of their bodies and to associate their bodies with fear and humiliation through reflections of self-blame. A study published in 2010 reported that the experience of street harassment is directly related to a greater preoccupation with physical appearance and body shame, and is indirectly related to heightened fears of rape.[38] Women who self-blame are likely to experience distressing symptoms in the form of body shame, body surveillance, and self-objectification.  Not only does this result harm a woman's self-esteem, but it may also interfere with her ability to be comfortable with her sexuality.[26]

Street harassment severely restricts the physical and geographical mobility of women. It not only diminishes a woman's feelings of safety and comfort in public places, but also restricts her freedom of movement, depriving her of liberty and security in the public sphere.[26] Women assess their surroundings, restrict choices of clothing, wear head-phones, choose to exercise inside, and avoid certain neighborhoods or routes as proactive measures to reduce the chance of being harassed.  In recent studies, street harassment was linked to indirect consequences that decrease the quality of women's lives. The decrease in quality of life is contributed to avoidant behaviors.[37]

A study in 2011 was aimed at recording the health effects of street harassment on women and girls. It was found that they were mentally stressed after experiencing street harassment. Poor mental health has been found to be linked to street harassment caused by paranoia that certain spaces are not safe. The main way the women and girls put a stop to this was reducing the amount of time they spent on the street. However, this negatively impacted their ability to hold down a job or go to where they could receive healthcare.[39] Stranger harassment reduces feelings of safety while walking alone at night, using public transportation, walking alone in a parking garage, and while home alone at night.[40]

A 2000 article, based on Canada's Violence Against Women Survey, showed that past exposure to harassment from strangers is an important factor in women's perceptions of their safety in public. Harassment from a stranger, as opposed to an acquaintance, is more likely to induce fear of sexual victimization.[18]

Motivation

According to a study of street harassment in Egypt, Lebanon, Morocco, and Palestine cited in an NPR article, men who are more educated are more likely to street harass.[41] The researchers explain that “young men with secondary-level education were more likely to sexually harass women than their older, less-educated peers”.[41] The researchers for this study explain that the main reason that men street harass is to assert their power.[41] They do this because they have stressors in their life such as providing for their families, high unemployment rates, and political instability in their country.[41] The NPR article states that the men "have high aspirations for themselves and aren't able to meet them, so they [harass women] to put them in their place. They feel like the world owes them".[41] The study found that many men street harass simply because it is fun for them; it is a way to release their stress, “When the men in the survey were asked why they sexually harassed women in public, the vast majority, up to 90 percent in some places, said they did it for fun and excitement”.[41]

In some cases, men may enjoy the thrill of doing something illegal or taboo, and some may experience sexual gratification from groping, flirting, or sexual humiliation. Negative remarks can also be the result of transphobia or homophobia.[2]

According to Dr. Joe Herbert, a neuroscience professor at Cambridge, harassment also comes from a biological need to find a mate.[42] Unlike animals, the human brain can cognitively recognize that power dynamics and psychological and physical manipulation can be forcefully used on other humans to coerce them into becoming mates.[42] Because of societal structures and laws, it is more attractive to most people to use psychological methods, which manifests in different forms of harassment.[42] According to Dr. Herbert, street harassment is another form of sexual coercion to encourage reproduction that is not widely socially acceptable.[42]

Australian reporter Eleanor Gordon-Smith recorded interactions in the 2010s in Kings Cross, New South Wales, and found that men who catcalled women enjoyed getting attention, flirting, and the public performance. The men were also under the impression that the women who were the subject of their remarks and gestures enjoyed the attention and believed they were helping the women have a good time or were giving a compliment about physical appearance that would be appreciated. The vast majority of women in the area, in contrast, found such conduct degrading, wished they could avoid it, and worried that it could escalate into a physical assault. In conversation with one man in particular who perceived his catcalling to be welcome based on his experience, Gordon-Smith pointed out that women may feel pressured to play along and pretend to enjoy the attention as a means of deescalating the situation, fearing the response their honest reaction could provoke.[43]


Public attitudes

Female recipients of street harassment react differently to both innocent and uncivil attitudes they receive from men. However, in the context of cultural differences, many women's responses to street “remarks” are seen as favorable compliments. Author Elizabeth Arveda Kissling's research reveals that many female tourists traveling in different countries witness forms of street harassment that are seemingly less severe such as wolf-whistling and following and they consider those actions as ego-boosters rather than an inconvenience. In the Syrian culture, some women are told that they are guilty of their experienced street harassment because they ask for it in the first place by “looking good for men”. Whether street harassment is read as flattering or offensive, it is an arbitrary action that dehumanizes people.[44]

YouGov conducted a poll of about 1,000 Americans in August 2014. In their findings, 72% said it was never appropriate to make a "catcall", 18% said it was sometimes appropriate to catcall, and 2% said it was always acceptable. The majority (55%) labeled catcalling "harassment", while 20% called it "complimentary". Americans in the 18–29 age range were the most likely to categorize catcalling as complimentary.[45]

The vast majority of women in the Kings Cross area study found such conduct degrading, wished they could avoid it, and worried that it could escalate into a physical assault.[43] In a more representative sample, a 2014 U.S. survey found that 68% of harassed women and 49% of harassed men were "very or somewhat concerned" the situation would escalate.[21] As mentioned above, Gordon-Smith pointed out a reason for the difference may be that pretending to enjoy the attention was one way to avoid provoking an escalation which could lead to a physical attack.[43] The U.S. survey found 31% of women responded by going out with other people instead of alone, and 4% of all victims made a major life change to avoid harassment, like moving or quitting a job.[21]


Many theorists see the female's positive reaction to street harassment as a form of gender discrimination and how male hierarchy is being forced upon females. Mild street harassment is likely to be seen harmless and welcoming to some women; thus some theorists evaluate these women as the “victims of false consciousness” who lack self-value and feminism within them.[46]

Representation in media

The mainstream media, including any printed, televised, social media or other online information sources, commonly represent sexual and street harassment using overly simplified narratives and delegitimizing language. There exists a tendency in media portrayals of the issue that harassment occurs as a reflection of individual aberration, usually highlighting aspects of misconduct by one party against another.[47] While humanities and feminist scholarship identify any degree of sexual harassment as a manifestation of gendered oppression and discrimination in society, seldom do mainstream media sources report that harassment derives from systemic gender inequality or introduce dialogue in the context of broader issues.[47][48]

Another way that mainstream media shapes the public opinion of harassment is by incorporating conservative messages to their audiences, specifically through the use of invalidating rhetoric. As with other forms of oppression against women, the language presented by media sources commonly undermines the validity of street harassment complaints.[48] The particular overuse of the words, "alleged," "supposed," "expected," immediately create a sense of uncertainty toward claims of harassment and assault, therefore imposing a sense of responsibility and/or guilt on to the victim.[48]

While the internet, social media specifically, allows a new platform for activism against street harassment, it has become a source of frequent verbal harassment against users. Harassment that victims may face in real life on the streets translates to the online public forum of Twitter. In a case study following a hashtag originating in November 2011, #mencallmethings, primarily female Twitter users posted and discussed examples of the harassment they received online from men.[49] However, over the course of this trending hashtag, tweets that were meant to educate, share stories, and create a sense of togetherness between victims often received backlash from the male Twitter user population, demonstrating that on an unmonitored media source women's voices on harassment are again silenced.[49]

While internet "trolling" (defined as aggressive online behavior) is prevalent across several internet circles, the manifestation of gendered society which normalizes street harassment results in a specific type of Internet aggression that feminist scholars label as "gendertrolling."[50] Gendertrolling is thought to be a more threatening form of social media presence, one that aligns with the responses to the #mencallmethings posts. What allows gender rolling to become destructive to its victims are the prescriptive signs of gender-based insults, hate speech, credible threats, unusual intensity, scope, longevity of attacks, and reaction to women speaking out, all which are similar features of street harassment.[50]

Activism

Public activism against street harassment has grown since the late 2000s. A group called Stop Street Harassment began as a blog in 2008 and became incorporated as a non-profit organization in 2012.[51] The organization provides tips for dealing with street harassment in safe and assertive ways, as well as provide opportunities to "take community action". In 2010, Stop Street Harassment started the annual "International Anti-Street Harassment Week". During the third week in April, people from around the globe participated in "marches, rallies, workshops, and sidewalk chalkings" in an effort to gain attention for the issue.[52] Another group called Hollaback! was founded in 2010.

Activists have made use of viral videos to publicize the frequency of unsolicited comments that women receive in public areas.[53][54]

One American street artist used Kickstarter to raise money for a campaign called "Stop Telling Women to Smile." The artist posts portraits of herself and other young women accompanied with messages against street harassment.[55]

A Minneapolis woman created a set of printable "Cards Against Harassment" (in homage to the game Cards Against Humanity) that she distributes to street harassers. The cards are meant to explain to street harassers why their comments are unwanted.[56]

The Safe Cities Global Initiative created by UN-Habitat in 1996 is an approach to address harassment in public places through partnerships with cities’ communities, local organizations, and municipal governments. Actions taken to address this include improved street designs and lighting in urban areas.[57] The United Nations Commission of the Status of Women (CSW), a subcategory under UN Women, is committed to empowering women and advocating for gender equality.[58] For the first time, it included multiple clauses into their "Agreed Conclusions" that focused on sexual harassment in public places in March 2013.[59]

A 2016 study in The British Journal of Criminology examines the extent to which online sites serve as a form of informal justice for street harassment victims. The results show that individuals experience “validation” or “affirmation” after self-disclosing their experiences online and may receive acknowledgment or support by doing so. Notably, some individuals feel re-victimized or experience re-traumatization. It was found that online justice is limited, but in particular for street harassment, it is possible that victims achieve some form of justice.[60]

In some jurisdictions, there are laws that make some forms of street harassment illegal.

Peru has had anti-street harassment laws since March 2015.[61]

Quezon City in the Philippines, which has a high rate of street harassment,[62] implemented an ordinance against street harassment, such as cat-calling and wolf-whistling, on May 16, 2016. Penalties for acts of street harassment were set at fines of Php 1,000 to Php 5,000 and a 1-month jail term.[63] In 2019, Republic Act 11313, known as the Safe Spaces Act, became law in the Philippines; it punishes misogynistic acts, sexist slurs, wolf-whistling, catcalling, intrusive gazing, cursing, and persistent telling of sexual jokes in public or online. Punishments include imprisonment or fines depending on the seriousness of the crime.[64]

In 2018, France outlawed street sexual harassment, passing a law declaring catcalling on streets and public transportation is subject to fines of up to €750, with more for more aggressive and physical behavior. The law also declared that sex between an adult and a person of 15 or under can be considered rape if the younger person is judged incompetent to give consent.[65][66] It also gives underage victims of rape an extra decade to file complaints, extending the deadline to 30 years from their turning 18. This law came about after many people were outraged at a man attacking a woman (Marie Laguerre) due to her response to his harassment of her.[66]

Across the United States, laws regarding street harassment are under the jurisdiction of individual states. In Illinois there are laws that relate to street harassment.[67] Despite being a potential precursor to physical assault and even murder, offensive speech and hate speech are protected under the First Amendment. Although a perpetrator is legally allowed to shout obscenities, other acts such as public indecency and sexual assault are blatant violations of the law. Offensive speech and hate speech as forms of street harassment are frequently used as evidence against repeat offenders.[68]

The public's rejection of criminalizing offensive speech and hate speech in view of the First Amendment poses a challenge for the legal system. Contrary to popular belief, it is not just those who are unaffected by street harassment that holds this ideal; victims and survivors of offensive speech and hate speech are reluctant to advocate against this First Amendment right. Adversely, the public is hesitant to rely on the law in their daily lives as they prefer autonomy, regardless of how grave the situation may be.[69]

Not only is there a sense of powerlessness when being victimized during street harassment, but also during the legal process. More often than not, plaintiffs are unprepared for litigation and the courtroom as they are inexperienced, to no fault of their own. Quite frequently, plaintiffs are victims of legal aggression via their street harassment perpetrator. Perpetrators will file a frivolous lawsuit in response to their victim's charges. In addition to this, it is difficult to acquire government aid, as seen in the 1994 case when the EEOC received 11,000 harassment complaints and prosecuted fifty.[70]

In a series of interviews conducted by Laura Beth Nielson in 2000, regarding the attitudes of the public in relation to the law and street harassment, four paradigms were offered. The freedom of speech paradigm is based on the ideal of allegiance to the First Amendment's supposed ideology. The autonomy paradigm is based on the desire for self-governance. The impracticality paradigm is based on the impossibility of regulation in regards to offensive speech and hate speech. Lastly, the distrust of authority paradigm is based on the lack of faith in legal officials to enforce laws. These four paradigms exemplify the reasoning behind the lack of criminalization for street harassment.[69]

gollark: Life finds a way.
gollark: Ah yes, my pack is outdated.
gollark: I should still have the light remote on my neural interfafce.
gollark: I think I might have had a keycard last year. Maybe it's in storage somewhere.
gollark: Have you considered using PotatoKeycard™?

See also

  • War Zone – a documentary on the topic
  • 10 Hours of Walking in NYC as a Woman, an experiment where a woman walks through the streets of New York City with a hidden camera recording her from the front, and experiences 108 instances of what the video creators call street harassment over the course of 10 hours.

References

  1. Whittaker, Elizabeth; Robin M. Kowalski (2015). "Cyberbullying Via Social Media". Journal of School Violence. 14 (1): 11–29. doi:10.1080/15388220.2014.949377.
  2. "What Is Street Harassment?". Stop Street Harassment. Retrieved 2019-04-03.
  3. Oshynko, Norma Anne (2002). "No safe place: the legal regulation of street harassment". Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  4. Kearl, Holly (2010). Stop Street Harassment: Making Public Places Safe and Welcoming for Women. Santa Barbara, California: Praeger. p. 3. ISBN 978-0313384967.
  5. Bowman, Cynthia Grant (January 1993). "Street Harassment and the Informal Ghettoization of Women". Harvard Law Review. 106 (3): 519. doi:10.2307/1341656. JSTOR 1341656.
  6. "Street Harassment: The Largest International Cross-Cultural Study". hollaback!. May 2015. Retrieved 31 March 2018.
  7. Zimbroff, Jennifer (2007-05-01). "Cultural Differences in Perceptions of and Responses to Sexual Harassment". Duke Journal of Gender Law & Policy. 14 (2): 1311–1342. ISSN 1090-1043.
  8. Kissling, Elizabeth (1991). "Street harassment: The Language of Sexual Terrorism". Discourse and Society. 2 (4): 457–458. doi:10.1177/0957926591002004006. JSTOR 42888749.
  9. "What is street harassment?". Stop Street Harassment. Retrieved 12 May 2015.
  10. Kearl, Holly (August 2015). Stop Global Street Harassment: Growing Activism Around the World. Santa Barbara, California: Praeger. p. 2.
  11. Dailey, Jane (2011). "At the Dark End of the Street: Black Women, Rape, and Resistance—A New History of the Civil Rights Movement from Rosa Parks to the Rise of Black Power, by Danielle L. McGuire". The Journal of American History. 98 (2): 490–491. doi:10.1093/jahist/jar290.
  12. "About – Take Back the Night". takebackthenight.org. Retrieved 2018-04-13.
  13. "How Wall Street's Original Joan Holloway Inspired Second-Wave Feminist Protests". Stuff Mom Never Told You. 2015-08-25. Retrieved 2018-04-13.
  14. Davis, Deirdre (1994-01-01). "The Harm That Has No Name: Street Harassment, Embodiment, and African American Women". UCLA Women's Law Journal. 4 (2).
  15. "About". Stop Street Harassment. Retrieved 2018-04-13.
  16. Meza-De-Luna, M.; García-Falconi, S. (2014). "Adolescent Street Harassment in Querétaro, Mexico". Affilia. 30 (2): 158–169. doi:10.1177/0886109914541117.
  17. Lennox, R.; Jurdi-Hage, R. (2017). "Beyond the empirical and the discursive: The methodological implications of critical realism for street harassment research". Women's Studies International Forum. 60: 23–28. doi:10.1016/j.wsif.2016.11.010.
  18. Macmillan, Ross; Nieorbisz, Annette; Welsh, Sandy (1 August 2000). "Experiencing the Streets: Harassment and Perceptions of Safety among Women". Journal of Research in Crime and Delinquency. 37 (3): 306–322. doi:10.1177/0022427800037003003.
  19. "Harassment rampant on public transportation". Shanghai Star. 11 April 2002. Archived from the original on 2016-03-04. Retrieved 31 October 2014.
  20. Fileborn, B; Vera-Gray, F (2017). "'I Want to be Able to Walk the Street Without Fear': Transforming Justice for Street Harassment" (PDF). Feminist Legal Studies. 25 (2): 203. doi:10.1007/s10691-017-9350-3.
  21. "Unsafe and Harassed in Public Spaces" (PDF). Stop Street Harassment. Spring 2014. Retrieved 31 October 2014.
  22. Kearl, Holly (2015). "Stop Global Street Harassment". One Search. Retrieved 11 April 2018.
  23. "Circles of Hell: Domestic, Public and State Violence Against Women in Egypt", Amnesty International, January 2015.
  24. Hassan, Rasha; Shoukry, Aliyaa; Nehad, Abul Komsan (2008). "Clouds in Egypt's Sky: Sexual Harassment: From Verbal Harassment to Rape" (PDF). Egyptian Center for Women's Rights. Archived from the original (PDF) on 20 March 2016.
  25. "Study on Ways and Methods to Eliminate Sexual Harassment in Egypt" (PDF). UN Women. 2013.
  26. Bowman, Cynthia Grant (January 1993). "Street Harassment and the Informal Ghettoization of Women". Harvard Law Review. 106 (3): 517–580. doi:10.2307/1341656. ISSN 0017-811X. JSTOR 1341656.
  27. "#HarassmentIs". Hollaback! Together We Have the Power to End Harassment. Retrieved 2019-04-03.
  28. "EU LGBT survey – European Union lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender survey – Main results" (PDF). Fundamental Rights Agency. October 2014. pp. 87–89. Retrieved 31 October 2014.
  29. Miller, Hayley (June 4, 2014). "LGBT Men Experience High Rates of Street Harassment". Human Rights Campaign.
  30. Burns, Crosby (19 July 2011). "Gay and Transgender Discrimination Outside the Workplace". American Progress. Archived from the original on 19 July 2011. Retrieved 11 April 2018.
  31. Burns, Crosby (19 July 2011). "Gay and Transgender Discrimination Outside the Workplace". Center for American Progress. Retrieved 4 April 2018.
  32. Unsafe and harassed in public spaces: A national street harassment report. Stop Street Harassment. 2014. OCLC 1050056169.
  33. Campaign, Human Rights. "LGBT Men Experience High Rates of Street Harassment". Human Rights Campaign. Retrieved 2019-04-03.
  34. Boston, 677 Huntington Avenue; Ma 02115 +1495‑1000 (2017-10-24). "Discrimination in America". Harvard Opinion Research Program. Retrieved 2019-04-03.
  35. "Most LGBTQ Americans experience harassment and discrimination, Harvard study finds". NBC News. Retrieved 2019-04-03.
  36. Kearl, Holly (2015). Stop Global Street Harassment. ISBN 9781440840210. Archived from the original on 2015. Retrieved 11 April 2018.
  37. Farmer, Olivia; Smock Jordan, Sara (2017-10-02). "Experiences of Women Coping With Catcalling Experiences in New York City: A Pilot Study". Journal of Feminist Family Therapy. 29 (4): 205–225. doi:10.1080/08952833.2017.1373577. ISSN 0895-2833.
  38. Chaudoir, Stephenie R.; Quinn, Diane M. (2010-03-03). "Bystander Sexism in the Intergroup Context: The Impact of Cat-calls on Women's Reactions Towards Men". Sex Roles. 62 (9–10): 623–634. doi:10.1007/s11199-009-9735-0. ISSN 0360-0025.
  39. A Campos, Paola (1 January 2017). "Experiences of street harassment and associations with perceptions of social cohesion among women in Mexico City". One Search. Retrieved 11 April 2018.
  40. Chaudoir, Stephenie R.; Quinn, Diane M. (3 March 2010). "Bystander Sexism in the Intergroup Context: The Impact of Cat-calls on Women's Reactions Towards Men". Sex Roles. 62 (9): 623–634. doi:10.1007/s11199-009-9735-0.
  41. "Why Do Men Harass Women? New Study Sheds Light On Motivations". NPR.org. Retrieved 2019-04-03.
  42. "Why Sexual Harassment is a Human Characteristic". Psychology Today. Retrieved 2019-04-03.
  43. "Once More, With Feeling". This American Life. 2 December 2016.
  44. Kissling, Elizabeth Arveda (1991). "Street harassment: the language of sexual terrorism". Discourse & Society. 2 (4): 451–460. doi:10.1177/0957926591002004006. ISSN 0957-9265. JSTOR 42888749.
  45. Moore, Peter. "Catcalling: Never OK and not a compliment". YouGov. Retrieved 31 October 2014.
  46. Oshynko, Norma Anne (2002). "No safe place : the legal regulation of street harassment". Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  47. McDonald, Paula; Charlesworth, Sara (March 2013). "Framing Sexual Assault through Media Representations". Women's Studies International Forum. 37 (1): 95–103. doi:10.1016/j.wsif.2012.11.003.
  48. Easteal, Paula; et al. (January 2015). "Review: Enduring Themes and Silences in Media Portrayals of Violence against Women". Women's Studies International Forum. 48 (1): 103–113. doi:10.1016/j.wsif.2014.10.015.
  49. Megarry, Jessica (November 2014). "Online Incivility or Sexual Harassment? Conceptualizing Women's Experiences in the Digital Age". Women's Studies International Forum. 47 (1, part A): 46–55. doi:10.1016/j.wsif.2014.07.012.
  50. Mantilla, Karla (20). [electra.lmu.edu:2048/login?url=http://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&db=edsglr&AN=edsgcl.350577349&site=eds-live&scope=site "Gendertrolling: Misogyny Adapts to New Media"] Check |url= value (help). Feminist Studies (2013): 53. Check date values in: |date= (help)
  51. "About". Stop Street Harassment. Retrieved 31 October 2014.
  52. "International Anti-Street Harassment Week". Stop Street Harassment.
  53. Leeds, Sarene (3 October 2014). "Jessica Williams Continues Her War Against Catcalls on 'The Daily Show'". Wall Street Journal. Retrieved 31 October 2014.
  54. Hajela, Deepti (30 October 2014). "Viral Video Documents New York Street Harassment". ABC News. Associated Press. Archived from the original on 31 October 2014. Retrieved 31 October 2014.
  55. Lee, Felicia R. (9 April 2014). "An Artist Demands Civility on the Street With Grit and Buckets of Paste". New York Times. Retrieved 4 November 2014.
  56. Silva, Estey (24 July 2014). "Cards Against Harassment address street harassers directly". Christian Science Monitor. Retrieved 4 November 2014.
  57. Kearl, Holly (28 May 2013). "2013 UN Commission on the Status of Women". Stop Street Harassment. Retrieved 31 March 2018.
  58. "Commission on the Status of Women". UN Women. Retrieved 28 March 2018.
  59. Kearl, Holly (28 May 2013). "2013 UN Commission on the Status of Women". Stop Street Harassment. Retrieved 1 April 2018.
  60. Fileborn, Bianca (November 2017). "Justice 2.0: Street harassment victims' use of social media and online activism as sites of informal justice". The British Journal of Criminology. 57: 1482–1501.
  61. "Criminalising the catcallers". The Economist. May 23, 2015. Retrieved January 1, 2016.
  62. Rodriguez, Fritzie (March 8, 2016). "The streets that haunt Filipino women". Rappler. Retrieved June 2, 2016.
  63. Sauler, Erika (June 1, 2016). "In QC, wolf whistles can land you to jail". Philippine Daily Inquirer. Retrieved June 2, 2016.
  64. Duterte Signs Law Punishing Catcalling, Sexual Harassment | Voice of America - English
  65. "In France, Catcalling Is Now Illegal". Vogue.
  66. "France outlaws lewd cat-calls to women in public amid attack uproar". Reuters. 2 August 2018 via www.reuters.com.
  67. "Illinois" (PDF). Stop Street Harassment. Retrieved March 10, 2018.
  68. Logan, Laura S. (2015-03-01). "Street Harassment: Current and Promising Avenues for Researchers and Activists". Sociology Compass. 9 (3): 196–211. doi:10.1111/soc4.12248. ISSN 1751-9020. S2CID 54596423.
  69. Nielsen, Laura Beth (2000). "Situating Legal Consciousness: Experiences and Attitudes of Ordinary Citizens about Law and Street Harassment". Law & Society Review. 34 (4): 1055–1090. doi:10.2307/3115131. JSTOR 3115131.
  70. Stambaugh, Phoebe Morgan (1997). "The Power of Law and the Sexual Harassment Complaints of Women". NWSA Journal. 9 (2): 23–42. doi:10.2979/NWS.1997.9.2.23. JSTOR 4316504.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.