by Georgia McKirgan
Last October Ronan Farrow set off a chain of
events that will change how we live. While there had been many high-profile
cases of workplace sexual assault before then - Roger Ailes, Bill O’Reilly and
Donald Trump - the article that Ronan Farrow wrote in The New Yorker, detailing
the experiences of 13 women who had been sexually assaulted by the Hollywood
movie producer, set off a tidal wave of sexual harassment claims that show no
sign of letting up. Already, the careers of Weinstein, Kevin Spacey, Louis C.
K., James Franco, Dustin Hoffman, Jeremy Piven, Damien Green and Al Franken are
effectively over or damaged and more will follow. Most of the cases so far have
been in entertainment or politics but no-one thinks these two occupations are
the only ones where this is a problem. The recent undercover reporting by the
Financial Times of the President’s Club dinner in the City shows that finance
may be an equally guilty sector of the economy.
A common feature of the cases so far has been
men taking advantage of positions of power to force themselves on women to whom
they are attracted. Some defenders of the men accused say that it is wrong to
judge men for things they did many years ago by the standards of today. My
response is, these kinds of behaviour were never ‘right’, we just used to
put up with it. Much of the current discussion is about how we punish the perpetrators.
Clearly, rape and sexual assault are crimes that need to punished but for less
serious incidents, what justifies someone losing their job and career? Where do
we draw the line? What are the appropriate punishments for different levels of
offence? The junior minister Mark Garnier has kept his job after admitting
asking his PA to buy sex toys for him but Damien Green obviously fell on the
other side of the line for behaving inappropriately towards the journalist,
Kate Maltby. Important as these issues are, my concern is looking forward. The
landscape of sexual relationships has changed, and it is never going to go
back. Women’s voices need to be heard.
As valuable as efforts are to educate men,
particularly young men, about appropriate behaviour towards women, I think
women are missing an opportunity if we sit back and let this be a discussion
about how men should behave. A good example of the minefield we are now in and
the role women can play is the recent case described in an article by a woman who
had a bad experience with the actor/comedian Aziz Ansari. Ansari is a big star,
having recently won a Golden Globe award for Best Performance in a TV Comedy. The article by “Grace”
describes events after she went back to Ansari’s apartment during a date.
Clearly, he behaved badly and tried several tactics to persuade her to go
further, more quickly in their relationship than she was comfortable with, but
a discussion about what he should have done differently without recognising her
agency is deeply sexist. While men like Ansari need to learn how to behave
appropriately towards women, women like “Grace” need to learn to be more vocal
and take more control of these highly-charged situations. At any point, she
could have been much more forceful in making it clear what her feelings were.
At any point, she could have left the apartment...this situation in particular
was never physically abusive. He was clearly behaving badly but if we leave the
discussion there, we are accepting that women are completely passive in these
situations. This is not about ‘victim-blaming’. Men are still totally
responsible if they put a woman in a position where she feels uncomfortable,
I’m just making the point that women have some agency in the situation and we
should help all women feel empowered to exert more control over these
situations.
A development towards this goal is the move in
many US colleges to bring in ‘explicit consent’ rules. Through organisations
like itsonus.org, there is a thriving movement seeking to educate college students
and on California campuses; consent is no longer a matter of not struggling or
not saying no. If the student initiating the sexual encounter doesn’t receive
an enthusiastic “yes,” either verbally or physically, then there is no consent.
If the student is incapacitated due to drugs or alcohol, there is no consent.
Some may feel these rules are an unwelcome intrusion into a very private
situation but it should help drive the empowerment I describe above. Women
are often the victim in these situations but while we are demanding that men
learn how to behave in the 21st century, women need to learn to be much clearer
and more decisive.
Things were changing anyway, but the #MeToo
campaign has put booster rockets under the process. While, rightly, men have
the most to do in terms of learning appropriate and considerate behaviours (why
has it taken so long?!), women need to take this opportunity to learn how to
fully exercise their rights as equal partners in the ‘relationship’ business.
If we miss this opportunity, we will be letting ourselves, our sisters and our
daughters down.
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