Aggarwal, Arjun Prakash. (1992). Sexual Harassment: A Guide for Understanding and Prevention. Toronto: Butterworths.
Allen, Robert L. (1995). Stopping sexual harassment: A challenge for community education. In Hill, Anita Faye and Jordan, Emma Coleman. (eds.). Race, Gender, and Power in America: The Legacy of the Hill-Thomas Hearings. New York & Oxford: Oxford University Press
American Association of University Women (AAUW) Education Foundation (2001). Hostile Hallways: Bullying, Teasing, and Sexual Harassment in Schools. Washington, DC.
Angelone, D.J., Richard Hirschman, Sarah Suniga, Michael Armey, and Aaron Armelie. (2005). The Influence of Peer Interactions on Sexually Oriented Joke Telling. Sex Roles, Feb., Vol. 52, Iss. 3-4.
Bacchi, Carol Lee. (1999). Sexual harassment: What is sexual about it?. Chapter 10 in Women, Policy and Politics: The Construction of Policy Problems. London: Sage.
Bacchi, Carol. (1992). Sex on campus - Where does ‘consent’ end and harassment begin?. Australian Universities Review, 35(1).
Baker, Carrie. (2007) The Women’s Movement Against Sexual Harassment. Cambridge University Press.
Balogh, Deborah Ware, Mary E. Kite, Kerri L. Pickel, Deniz Canel, and James Schroeder. (2003). The effects of delayed report and motive for reporting on perceptions of sexual harassment. Sex Roles, April, Vol. 48, Iss. 7/8.
Barak, Azy. (2005). Sexual Harassment on the Internet. Social Science Computer Review, 23, 1, Spring, 77-92.
Bartlett, Katherine. (1992). Only girls wear barrettes: Dress and appearance standards, community norms, and workplace equality. Michigan Law Review, pp. 2541, 2546-56, 2568-82.
Begany, J.J. & Milburn, M.A. (2002) Psychological predictors of sexual harassment: authoritarianism, hostile sexism and rape myths. Psychology of Men and Masculinity, 3(2): 119-126.
Bender, D. E. (2004). “Too Much Of Distasteful Masculinity”: Historicizing Sexual Harassment in the Garment Sweatshop and Factory. Journal of Women’s History, 15(4): 91.
Berdahl, J. L. (2007). The sexual harassment of uppity women. Journal of Applied Psychology, 92(2), 425.
Bernard, P., Legrand, S., & Klein, O. (2016). From Bodies to Blame: Exposure to Sexually Objectifying Media Increases Tolerance Toward Sexual Harassment.
Bingham, Shereen G. (ed). (1994). Conceptualizing Sexual Harassment as Discursive Practice. Westport, Conn.: Praeger.
Birdeau, Danielle R., Cheryl L. Somers, and Genie O. Lenihan. (2005). Effects of Educational Strategies On College Students’ Identification of Sexual Harassment. Education, Spring, Vol. 125, Iss. 3.
Black, Amy E., and Jamie L. Allen. (2001). Tracing the legacy of Anita Hill: The Thomas/Hill hearings and media coverage of sexual harassment. Gender Issues, Winter, Vol. 19, Iss. 1.
Bondestam, F., & Lundqvist, M. (2020). Sexual harassment in higher education–a systematic review. European Journal of Higher Education, 1-23.
Bongiorno, R., Langbroek, C., Bain, P. G., Ting, M., & Ryan, M. K. (2019). Why Women Are Blamed for Being Sexually Harassed: The Effects of Empathy for Female Victims and Male Perpetrators. Psychology of Women Quarterly, 0(0), 0361684319868730. 10.1177/0361684319868730
Borgida, Eugene, and Susan T. Fiske. (eds.). (1995). Journal of Social Issues, Special Issue: Gender Stereotyping, Sexual Harassment, and the Law, 51(1), Spring.
Brandenburg, Judith B. (1997) Confronting Sexual Harassment: What Schools and Colleges Can Do. New York: Teachers College Press.
Brant, Clare, and Yun Lee Too. (eds.). (1994). Rethinking Sexual Harassment. London: Pluto Press.
Bravo, Ellen, and Ellen Cassedy. (1992). The 9 to 5 guide to Combatting Sexual Harassment: Candid Advice from 9 to 5, the National Association of Working Women. New York: John Wiley & Sons.
Burian, B. K., Yanico, B.J., & Martinez, C. R. (1998). Group gender composition effects on judgments of sexual harassment. Psychology of Women Quarterly, 22(3), 465-480.
Burns, Sarah (year?) Issues in workplace sexual harassment law and related social science research. Journal of Social Issues, pp. 193-207.
Bursik, Krisanne. (1992) Perceptions of Sexual Harassment in an Academic Context. Sex Roles, 27: 7/8, October.
Butler A.M, Chung-Yan G.A. (2011). The Influence of Sexual Harassment Frequency and Perceptions of Organizational Justice on Victim Responses to Sexual Harassment. Eur. J.Work Org. Psychol; 20(6): 729-754.
Carstensen, G. (2016). Sexual Harassment Reconsidered: The Forgotten Grey Zone. NORA - Nordic Journal of Feminist and Gender Research, 24(4), 267-280. doi:10.1080/08038740.2017.1292314
Carver, Terrell. (1996). ‘He said/she said’: Interpreting the Clarence Thomas - Anita Hill Hearings. Chapter 5 in Gender is Not a Synonym for Women, Boulder, Colorado: Lynne Rienne Publishers.
Chamberlain, Elizabeth. (1997). Courtroom to classroom: There is more to sexual harassment. NWSA Journal, Special Issue: Sexual Harassment, 9(2), Summer.
Clear E.R, Coker A.L, Cook-Craig P.G, Bush H.M, Garcia L.S, Williams C.M, Lewis A.M, Fisher B.S. (2014). Sexual harassment victimization and perpetration among high school students. Violence Against Women, ePub, 2014.
Clodfelter, T. L. (2014). Sexual Harassment. Sexual Victimization: Then and Now, 51.
Collier, Rohan. (1995). Combating Sexual Harassment in the Workplace. Open University Press.
Collins, C., M. Batten, J. Ainley, and C. Getty. (1996). Gender and School Education. Canberra: Australian Council for Educational Research, June. (figures on sex-based harassment in schools).
Comer, Debra R., and Elizabeth A. Cooper. (1998). Gender relations and sexual harassment in the workplace: Michael Crichton’s Disclosure as a teaching tool. Journal of Management Education, April, Vol. 22, Iss. 2.
Cornell, Drucilla. (1995). The Imaginary Domain: Abortion, Pornography and Sexual Harrassment.
Cortina, L. M., S. Swan, L. F. Fitzgerald, and C. Waldo. (1998). Sexual harassment and assault: Chilling the climate for women in academia. Psychology of Women Quarterly, 22(3), 419-441.
Coverdale-Sumrall, Amber, and Dena Taylor. (eds.). (1992). Sexual Harassment: Women Speak Out. Freedom, CA: Crossing Press.
Cummings, Kimberly M., and Madeline Armenta. (2002). Penalties for peer sexual harassment in an academic context: The influence of harasser gender, participant gender, severity of harassment, and the presence of bystanders. Sex Roles, Sept., Vol. 47, Iss. 5/6.
Currie, Jan, Patricia Harris, and Bev Thiele. (2000). The discursive framing of sexual harassment in a university community. Gender and Education, 12(3), September.
De Haas, S., & Timmerman, G. (2010). Sexual harassment in the context of double male dominance. European journal of work and organizational psychology, 19(6), 717-734.
De Judicibus, M., and M.P. McCabe. (2001). Blaming the Target of Sexual Harassment: Impact of gender role, sexist attitudes, and work role. Sex Roles, 44: 7/8, April: 401-417.
Dekker, I., and J. Barling. (1998). Personal and organizational predictors of workplace sexual harassment of women by men. Journal of Occupational Health Psychology, 3(1), 7-18.
Dellinger, Kirsten, and Christine L. Williams. (2002). The locker room and the dorm room: Workplace norms and the boundaries of sexual harassment in magazine editing. Social Problems, May, Vol. 49, Iss. 2.
DeSouza, Eros, and A. Gigi Fansler. (2003). Contrapower sexual harassment: A survey of Students and Faculty members. Sex Roles, June, Vol. 48, Iss. 11/12.
DeSouza, Eros, and Joseph Solberg. (2004). Women’s and Men’s Reactions to Man-to-Man Sexual Harassment: Does the Sexual Orientation of the Victim Matter? Sex Roles, May, Vol. 50, Iss. 9/10.
di Gennaro, K., & Ritschel, C. (2019). Blurred Lines: The Relationship between Catcalls and Compliments. Women’s Studies International Forum, 75, 102239. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.wsif.2019.102239
Diehl, C., Glaser, T., & Bohner, G. (2014). Face the consequences: Learning about victim’s suffering reduces sexual harassment myth acceptance and men’s likelihood to sexually harass. Aggressive Behavior, 40(6), 489-503.
Diekmann, K., Walker, S., Galinsky, A. & Tenbrunsel, A. (2013). Double victimization in the workplace: Why observers condemn passive victims of sexual harassment. Organization Science, 24, 614-628.
Donovan, M. A., & Drasgow, F. (1999). Do men’s and women’s experiences of sexual harassment differ? An examination of the differential test functioning of the Sexual Experiences Questionnaire. Military Psychology, 11(3), 265-282.
Dziech, Billie Wright, and Linda Weiner. (1990). The Lecherous Professor: Sexual Harassment on Campus. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Easteal, P., and K. Judd (2008). ‘She Said, He Said’: Credibility and sexual harassment cases in Australia. Women’s Studies International Forum, 31(5): 336-344.
Eisaguirre, Lynne. (1993). Sexual Harassment: A Reference Handbook. Santa Barbara, Calif.: ABC-CLIO.
Elliman, T., Shannahoff, M., Metzler, J. & Toblin, R. (2018). Prevalence of bystander intervention opportunities and behaviors among US army soldiers. Health, Education & Behavior, online 1-7.
Epstein, Debbie. (1996). Keeping them in their place: Hetero/sexist harassment, gender and the enforcement of heterosexuality. In Holland, Janet and Adkins, Lisa. (eds.). Sex, Sensibility and the Gendered Body. Hampshire & London: Macmillan.
Eskenazi, Martin, and David Gallen. (1992). Sexual Harassment: Know Your Rights!. New York: Carroll & Graff.
Farley, Lin. (1978). Sexual Shakedown: The Sexual Harassment of Women on the Job. New York: McGraw-Hill.
Fileborn, B., Wadds, P., & Tomsen, S. (2020). Sexual harassment and violence at Australian music festivals: Reporting practices and experiences of festival attendees. Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology, 0004865820903777. doi:10.1177/0004865820903777Fineran, S. (2002). Adolescents at Work: Gender issues and sexual harassment. Violence Against Women, 8(8): 953-967.
Fineran, S., and L. Bennett. (1998). Teenage Peer Sexual Harassment: Implications for Social Work Practice in Education. Social Work, 43(1).
Fineran, S., and L. Bennett. (1999). Gender and Power Issues of Peer Sexual Harassment Among Teenagers. Journal of Interpersonal Violence, 14(6): 626-641.
Fineran, S., and R. M. Bolen. (2006). Risk Factors for Peer Sexual Harassment in Schools. J Interpers Violence, 21(9): 1169-1190.
Fitzgerald, L.F., Drasgow, F., Hulin, C.L., Gelfand, M.J. & Magley, V.J. (1997) Antecedents and consequences of sexual harassment in organizations: A test of an integrated model. Journal of Applied Psychology, 82, 4, 578-589.
Flowers, Ronald B. (1994). The Victimization and Exploitation of Women and Children: A Study of Physical, Mental and Sexual Maltreatment in the United States. Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland & Co..
Foulis, Danielle, and Marita P. McCabe. (1997). Sexual harassment: Factors affecting attitudes and perceptions. Sex Roles, 37(9/10): 773-798.
Galdi, S., Maass, A., & Cadinu, M. (2014). Objectifying media: Their effect on gender role norms and sexual harassment of women. Psychology of Women Quarterly, 38(3), 398-413.
Gallop, Jane. (1995). The Lecherous Professor: A reading. Differences, Summer.
Gallop, Jane. (1997). Feminist Accused of Sexual Harassment. Durham: Duke University Press.
Gardner, Carol Brooks. (1995). Passing By: Gender and Public Harassment. Berkeley and Los Angeles, CA: University of California Press.
Garner, Helen. (1995). The First Stone. Sydney: Picador.
Gervais, S. J., & Eagan, S. (2017). Sexual objectification: The common thread connecting myriad forms of sexual violence against women. American journal of orthopsychiatry, 87(3), 226.
Glomb, Stephen M., and Dorothy L. Espelage. (2005). The Influence of Restrictive Emotionality in Men’s Emotional Appraisal of Sexual Harassment: A Gender Role Interpretation. Psychology of Men & Masculinity, 6(4), October.
Golden, John H., Craig A. Johnson, and Rebecca A. Lopez. (2001). Sexual Harassment in the Workplace: Exploring the effects of attractiveness on perception of harassment. Sex Roles, 45(11/12), December.
Green, Gill et.al. (1993). ‘Who wears the trousers?’ Sexual harassment in research settings. Women’s Studies International Forum, 16(6), November-December.
Gruber, J. E. (1998). The impact of male work environments and organizational policies on women’s experiences of sexual harassment. Gender & Society, 12(3), 301-320.
Gruber, J. E. and S. Fineran (2007). The Impact of Bullying and Sexual Harassment on Middle and High School Girls. Violence Against Women, 13(6): 627-643.
Gruber, J. E., and P. Morgan. (eds.). (2004). In the Company of Men: Sexual Harassment and Male Domination. Boston: Northeastern University Press.
Halper, L. R., & Rios, K. J. S. R. (2019). Feeling Powerful but Incompetent: Fear of Negative Evaluation Predicts Men’s Sexual Harassment of Subordinates. 80(5), 247-261. doi:10.1007/s11199-018-0938-0
Hanmer, Jalna, and Mary Maynard. (eds.). (1987). Women, Violence and Social Control. Hampshire & London: Macmillan.
Hart, C. G. (2019). The Penalties For Self-Reporting Sexual Harassment. Gender & Society, 33(4), 534-559. doi:10.1177/0891243219842147
Hartel, Lynda Jones, and Helena M. VonVille. (1995). Sexual Harassment: A Selected, Annotated Bibliography. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press.
Herbert, C.M.H. (1989). Talking of Silence: The Sexual Harassment of School Girls. London: Falmer Press.
Herrera, M. C., Herrera, A., & Expósito, F. (2014). Stop Harassment! Men’s reactions to victims’ confrontation. The European Journal of Psychology Applied to Legal Context, 6(2), 45-52.
Hesson-McInnis, M.S. & Fitzgerald, L.F. (1997) Sexual harassment: A preliminary test of an integrative model. Journal of Applied Social Psychology, 27, 10, 877-901.
Hill, Anita Faye, and Emma Coleman Jordan. (eds.). (1995). Race, Gender, and Power in America: The Legacy of the Hill-Thomas Hearings. New York & Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Holland, K. J., Rabelo, V. C., Gustafson, A. M., Seabrook, R. C., & Cortina, L. M. (2016). Sexual harassment against men: Examining the roles of feminist activism, sexuality, and organizational context. Psychology of Men & Masculinity, 17(1), 17.
Hollway, W., and T. Jefferson. (1996). PC or Not PC: Sexual Harassment and the Question of Ambivalence. Human Relations, 49(3): 373-393.
Houghton-James, Hazel. (1995). Sexual Harassment. London: Cavendish.
Human Rights Commission. (2012). Working Without Fear: Results of the Sexual Harassment National Telephone Survey 2012. Sydney.
Hunt, C.J, and K. Gonsalkorale. (2014). Who cares what she thinks, what does he say? Links between masculinity, in-group bonding and gender harassment. Sex Roles, 70(1-2): 14-27.
Jaschik-Herman, M.L., and A. Fisk. (1995). Women’s perceptions and labeling of sexual harassment in academia before and after the Hill-Thomas hearings. Sex Roles, 33(5-6): 439-446.
Johnson, Molly, and Ebony Bennett. (2015). Everyday sexism: Australian women’s experiences of street harassment. Australia Institute Briefing Note, March 2015. Canberra: The Australia Institute.
Jones, C. (2006). Drawing boundaries: Exploring the relationship between sexual harassment, gender and bullying. Women’s Studies International Forum, 29(2): 147-158.
Kasinsky, Renee Goldsmith. (1998). Tailhook and the construction of sexual harassment in the media: ‘Rowdy Navy boys’ and women who made a difference. Violence Against Women, 4(1), pp. 81-99.
Katherine, Sarah Mary, and Frances Joychild. (1993). A critique of the law of sexual harassment in Aotearoa/New Zealand. NZ Suffrage Centennial Women’s Law Conference Papers, pp. 43-78.
Kennedy, M. Alexis, and Boris B. Gorzalka. (2002). Asian and Non-Asian Attitudes Toward Rape, Sexual Harassment, and Sexuality. Sex Roles, Vol. 46 No’s 7/8, April.
Kohlman, Marla H. (2004). Person or Position?: The Demographics of Sexual Harassment in the Workplace. Equal Opportunities International, Vol. 23, Iss. 3-5.
Koskela, Hille, and Sirpa Tani. (2005). “Sold out!” Women’s practices of resistance against prostitution related sexual harassment. Women’s Studies International Forum, Volume 28, Issue 5, September-October, pp. 418-429.
Lahelma, E., T. Palmu, and T. Gordon. (2000). Intersecting Power Relations in Teachers’ Experiences of Being Sexualized or Harassed by Students. Sexualities, 3(4): 463-481.
Lampman, C., A. Phelps, S. Bancroft and M. Beneke (2009). Contrapower Harassment in Academia: A Survey of Faculty Experience with Student Incivility, Bullying, and Sexual Attention. Sex Roles, 60(5): 331-346.
Langelan, Martha J. (1993). Back Off! How to Confront and Stop Sexual Harassment and Harassers. New York: Simon & Schuster.
Larkin, J., and K. Popaleni. (1994). Heterosexual Courtship Violence and Sexual Harassment: The Private and Public Control of Young Women. Feminism & Psychology, 4(2): 213.
LaRocca, Michela A., and Jeffrey D. Kromrey. (1999). The Perception of Sexual Harassment in Higher Education: Impact of gender and attractiveness. Sex Roles, 40(11/12).
Lee, Deborah. (1998). Sexual harassment in PhD supervision. Gender and Education, 10(3), September.
Lee, Deborah. (2000). Hegemonic masculinity and male feminisation: The sexual harassment of men at work. Journal of Gender Studies, 9(2), July.
Lee, Deborah. (2001). ‘He didn’t sexually harass me, as in harassed for sex… He was just horrible’: Women’s definitions of unwanted male sexual conduct at work. Women’s Studies International Forum. 24(1), January-February.
Lee, Raymond M. (1995). Sexual harassment and assault. Chapter 6 in Dangerous Fieldwork. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications.
Lee, V.E., R.G. Croninger, E. Linn, and X. Chen. (1996). The Culture of Sexual Harassment in Secondary Schools. American Educational Research Journal, 33(2): 383-417.
LeMoncheck, Linda, and Mane Hajdin. (1997). Sexual Harassment: A Debate.
Leskinen, E. A., Cortina, L. M., & Kabat, D. B. (2011). Gender harassment: Broadening our understanding of sex-based harassment at work. Law and human behavior, 35(1), 25-39.
Lucero, M. A., Allen, R. E., & Middleton, K. L. (2006). Sexual harassers: Behaviors, motives, and change over time. Sex Roles, 55(5-6), 331-343.
Lucero, M. A., Middleton, K. L., Finch, W. A., & Valentine, S. R. (2003). An empirical investigation of sexual harassers: Toward a perpetrator typology. Human Relations, 56(12), 1461-1483.
Lumby, Catharine. (1994). Staff, students and sexual pressure. The Independent Monthly, March.
Lundy-Wagner, V., & Winkle-Wagner, R. (2013). A harassing climate? Sexual harassment and campus racial climate research. Journal of Diversity in Higher Education, 6(1), 51.
Maass, A., Cadinu, M., Guarnieri, G., & Grasselli, A. (2003). Sexual harassment under social identity threat: the computer harassment paradigm. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 85(5), 853.
MacKinnon, Catherine. (1979). Sexual Harassment of Working Women. New Haven: Yale University Press.
Madan, M., & Nalla, M. K. (2016). Sexual Harassment in Public Spaces: Examining Gender Differences in Perceived Seriousness and Victimization. International Criminal Justice Review, 26(2), 80-97.
Madera, J. M., K. E. Podratz, E. B. King, and M. R. Hebl. (2007). Schematic Responses to Sexual Harassment Complainants: The Influence of Gender and Physical Attractiveness. Sex Roles, 56(3-4).
Madera, J. M. (2018). When Targets Blame Their Organization for Sexual Harassment: A Multilevel Investigation of Within-Person Appraisals. Cornell Hospitality Quarterly, 59(1), 49-60. doi:10.1177/1938965517730317
Magley, V., and E. Shupe. (2005). Self-Labeling Sexual Harassment. Sex Roles, 53(3 - 4): 173-189.
Marin, Amy J., and Rosanna E. Guadagno. (1999). Perceptions of Sexual Harassment Victims as a Function of Labeling and Reporting. Sex Roles, 41(11/12).
Marks, Michelle A. (1993) Sexual Harassment on Campus: Effects of Professor Gender on Perception of Sexually Harassing Behaviors. Sex Roles, 28: 3/4, February.
Marles, Fay. (year?). Workplaces Approaches to Sexual Harassment. Affirmative Action Agency, Monograph No. 5.
Martin, S.E. (1995). Sexual harassment: The link joining gender stratification, sexuality, and women’s economic status. In Freeman, Jo. (ed.). Women: A Feminist Perspective. Mountain View: Mayfield.
May, Larry. (1998). Sexual harassment and solidarity. Chapter 6 in Masculinity and Morality. Ithaca & London: Cornell University Press.
Mayhew, C. (2007). Young workers at risk: overlaps between initiation rites, pranks, bullying, sexual harassment and occupational violence. Journal of Occupational Health and Safety Australia and New Zealand, 23(4): 333-341.
McCabe, Marita P., and Lisa Hardman. (2005). Attitudes and Perceptions of Workers to Sexual Harassment. The Journal of Social Psychology, December, Vol.145, Iss. 6.
McDonald, P., & Charlesworth, S. (2013). Framing sexual harassment through media representations. Women's Studies International Forum, 37, 95-103.
McDonald, P., & Charlesworth, S. (2016). Workplace sexual harassment at the margins. Work, Employment and Society, 30(1), 118-134.
McDonald, P., and Sara Charlesworth. (2016). Workplace sexual harassment at the margins. Work, Employment & Society, 30(1), pp.118-134.
McMaster, L.E., J. Connolly, D. Pepler, and W.M. Craig. (2002). Peer to peer sexual harassment in early adolescence: A developmental perspective. Development and Psychopathology, 14(01): 91-105.
Mead, Jenna. (ed). (1997). Bodyjamming: Sexual Harassment, Feminism and Public Life. Milsons Point, NSW: Random House.
Mellgren, C., Andersson, M., & Ivert, A.-K. (2017). “It Happens All the Time”: Women’s Experiences and Normalization of Sexual Harassment in Public Space. Women & Criminal Justice, 1-20.
Menard, K.S., G.C.N. Hall, A.H. Phung, M.F.E. Ghebrial, and L. Martin. (2003). Gender Differences in Sexual Harassment and Coercion in College Students: Developmental, Individual, and Situational Determinants. J Interpers Violence, 18(10): 1222-1239.
Meyer, E. J. (2008). Gendered harassment in secondary schools: understanding teachers’ (non) interventions. Gender and Education, 20(6): 555 - 570.
Miller, Laura L. (1997). Not just weapons of the weak: Gender harassment as a form of protest for Army men. Social Psychology Quarterly. 60: 32-51.
Milligan, Sandra. (1992). Re-thinking sex-based harassment in schools. In Forum of Education, (ed.). Through Girls’ Eyes: Australian Research, Policy and Curriculum in the 1990s. University of Sydney.
Minson, Jeffrey. (1993). Questions of Conduct: Sexual Harassment, Citizenship, Government. New York: St. Martin’s Press.
Mohipp, C., and C. Y. Senn. (2008). Graduate Students’ Perceptions of Contrapower Sexual Harassment. Journal of Interpersonal Violence, 23(9): 1258-1276.
Montemurro, Beth. (2003). Not a laughing matter: Sexual harassment as “material” on workplace-based situation comedies. Sex Roles, May, Vol. 48, Iss. 9/10.
Moore, J., & Mennicke, A. (2019). Empathy deficits and perceived permissive environments: sexual harassment perpetration on college campuses. Journal of Sexual Aggression, 1-13.
Morewitz, Stephen J. (1996). Sexual Harassment and Social Change in American Society. San Francisco: Austin & Winfield.
Morris, Celia. (1994). Bearing Witness: Sexual Harassment and Beyond - Everywoman’s Story. New York: Little, Brown.
Morrison, Toni. (ed). (1993). Race-ing Justice, En-gendering Power: Essays on Anita Hill, Clarence Thomas, and the Construction of Social Reality. London: Chatto & Windus.
Murnen, S.K., and L. Smolak. (2000). The Experience of Sexual Harassment Among Grade-School Students: Early Socialization of Female Subordination? Sex Roles, 43(1): 1-17.
National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine. (2018). Sexual Harassment of Women: Climate, Culture, and Consequences in Academic Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: https://doi.org/10.17226/24994.
NWSA Journal. (1997). Special Issue: Sexual Harassment, 9(2), Summer.
O’Connor, Maureen, Barbara A. Gutek, Margaret Stockdale, Tracey M. Geer, and Renee Melancon. (2004). Explaining Sexual Harassment Judgments: Looking Beyond Gender of the Rater. Law and Human Behavior, Feb., Vol. 28, Iss. 1.
O’Donohue, W., K. Downs, and E.A. Yeater. (1998). Sexual harassment: A review of the literature. Aggression and Violent Behavior, 3(2): 111-128.
Ohse, D., and M. Stockdale. (2008). Age Comparisons in Workplace Sexual Harassment Perceptions. Sex Roles, 59(3): 240-253.
Ojeda, D., Mansfield, B., McSweeney, K., Bonds, A., Cockburn, J., & Domosh, M. (2019). It’s time to recognize how men’s careers benefit from sexually harassing women in academia. Human Geography.
Olukemi, L. O. (2005). Street Smut: Gender, Media, And The Legal Power Dynamics Of Street Harassment, “Hey Sexy” And Other Verbal Ejaculations. Columbia Journal of Gender and the Law, 14(1): 91.
Paludi, Michele A. (1996). Sexual Harrassment on College Campuses: Abusing the Ivory Power. Albany. New York: State University of New York Press (revised edition of Ivory Power: Sexual Harassment on campus. Published 1990).
Patai, Daphne. (1998). Galloping contradictions: Sexual harassment in academe. Gender Issues, 16(1/2): 86.
Patai, Daphne. (1998). Heterophobia: Sexual Harassment and the Future of Feminism. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield.
Pattinson, Terry. (1991). Sexual Harassment. London: Futura.
Paul, Ellen Frankel. (1994). Sexual harassment: A defining moment and its repercussions. Chapter 4 in Rochefort, David A. and Cobb, Roger W. (eds.). The Politics of Problem Definition: Shaping the Policy Agenda. Lawrence, Kan.: University Press of Kansas.
Petrocelli, William, and Barbara Kate Repa. (1992). Sexual Harassment on the Job. Berkeley: Nolo Press.
Pickerill, J. M., R. A. Jackson, and M. A. Newman (2006). Changing Perceptions of Sexual Harassment in the Federal Workforce, 1987-94. Law & Policy, 28(3): 368-394.
Pierce, Charles A., Herman Aguinis, and Susan K.R. Adams. (2000). Effects of a dissolved workplace romance and rater characteristics on responses to a sexual harassment accusation. Academy of Management Journal, Oct., Vol. 43, Iss. 5.
Plater, M. A., and R. E. Thomas. (1998). The impact of job performance, gender, and ethnicity on the managerial review of sexual harassment allegations. Journal of Applied Social Psychology, 28(1), 52-70.
Popovich, P., & Warren, M. (2010). The role of power in sexual harassment as a counterproductive behavior in organizations. Human Resource Management Review, 20, 45-53.
Pringle, Rosemary. (1988). Secretaries Talk: Sexuality, Power and Work. Sydney: Allen & Unwin.
Quinlan, E., Robertson, S., Carr, T., & Gerrard, A. (2019). Workplace Harassment Interventions and Labour Process Theory: A Critical Realist Synthesis of the Literature. Sociological Research Online, 0(0), 1360780419846507. doi:10.1177/1360780419846507
Quinlan, E., Robertson, S., Carr, T., & Gerrard, A. (2019). Workplace Harassment Interventions and Labour Process Theory: A Critical Realist Synthesis of the Literature. Sociological Research Online, 0(0), 1360780419846507. doi:10.1177/1360780419846507
Quinn, Beth A. (2002). Sexual harassment and masculinity: The power and meaning of “girl watching.” Gender & Society, June, 16(3), pp. 386-402.
Quinn, Kathryn, and Nancy L. Carson. (1990). Rape, Incest and Sexual Harassment: A Guide for Helping Survivors. New York: Praeger.
Quinn, Kathryn. (1996). Sexual Harassment in the Australian Defence Force. Canberra, Department of Defence.
Radford, Sarah Mary (year?). Sex stereotyping and the promotion of women to positions of power. Hastings Law Journal, pp. 471-503.
Reilly, Mary Ellen et.al. (1992). Tolerance for sexual harassment related to self-reported sexual victimization. Gender & Society, 6(1), March.
Renold, Emma. (2002). ‘Presumed Innocence’: (Hetero)sexual, homophobic and heterosexist harassment amongst primary school girls and boys. Childhood, 9 (4), pp.415-433.
Ring, Laura. (1994). Sexual harassment and the production of gender. Differences, 6(1).
Robinson, Kerry. (2000). ‘Great Tits, Miss!’ The silencing of male students’ sexual harassment of female teachers in secondary schools: a focus on gendered authority. Discourse, Volume 21, Number 1, April, pp. 75-90.
Roscoe, B., J.S. Strouse, and M.P. Goodwin. (1994). Sexual Harassment: Early Adolescents’ Self-Reports of Experiences and Acceptance. Adolescence, 29(115).
Rosen, L. N., and L. Martin. (1998). Predictors of tolerance of sexual harassment among male U.S. Army soldiers. Violence Against Women, 4(4), 491-504.
Rosewarne, L. (2007). Pin-ups in public space: Sexist outdoor advertising as sexual harassment. Women’s Studies International Forum, 30(4): 313-325.
Rospenda, Kathleen M., Judith A. Richman, and Stephanie J. Nawyn. (1998). Doing power: The confluence of gender, race, and class in contrapower sexual harassment. Gender & Society, 12(1), February.
Rubin, Linda J., Bethany R. Hampton, and Pamela W. McManus. (1997). Sexual harassment of students by professional psychology educators: A national survey. Sex Roles, November, Vol. 37, Iss. 9/10.
Runtz M.G., and C.W. O’Donnell. (2003). Students’ Perceptions of Sexual Harassment: Is It Harassment Only If the Offender Is a Man and the Victim Is a Woman? Journal of Applied Social Psychology, Volume 33, Number 5, May, pp. 963-982.
Russell, Brenda L., and Kristin Y. Trigg. (2004). Tolerance of Sexual Harassment: An Examination of Gender Differences, Ambivalent Sexism, Social Dominance, and Gender Roles. Sex Roles, April, Vol. 50, Iss. 7/8.
Saunders, Skye, and Patricia Easteal. (2013). The nature, pervasiveness and manifestations of sexual harassment in rural Australia: Does ‘masculinity’ of workplace make a difference? Women’s Studies International Forum, 40: 121-131.
Schweinle, W., C. Cofer, and S. Schatz (2009). Men’s Empathic Bias, Empathic Inaccuracy, and Sexual Harassment. Sex Roles, 60(1): 142-150.
Scott, Greg, and Brian Martin. (2006). Tactics Against Sexual Harassment: The Role of Backfire. Journal of International Women’s Studies, 7(4), May.
Senate Standing Committee on Foreign Affairs, Defence and Trade. (1994). Sexual Harassment in the Australian Defence Force (Facing the Future Together). Canberra: A.G.P.S., August.
Shaw, E., Hegewisch, A., Phil, M., & Hess, C. (2018). Sexual harassment and assault at work: Understanding the costs (Briefing paper, IWPR B376). Washington, DC: Institute for Women’s Policy Research.
Shelton, J. N., and T. M. Chavous. (1999). Black and White college women’s perceptions of sexual harassment. Sex Roles, 40(7-8): 593-615.
Shenvyn, David S., Ezekiel A. Kaufman, and Adam A. Klausner. (2000). Same-sex sexual harassment. Cornell Hotel and Restaurant Administration Quarterly, Dec., Vol. 41, Iss. 6.
Shepela, Sharon Toffey, and Laurie L. Levesque. (1998). Poisoned waters: Sexual harassment and the college climate. Sex Roles, April, Vol. 38, Iss. 7/8.
Shute, R., L. Owens, et al. (2008). Everyday Victimization of Adolescent Girls by Boys: Sexual Harassment, Bullying or Aggression? Sex Roles, 58(7): 477-489.
Siegal, Deborah L. (1991). Sexual Harassment: Research and Resources. New York: National Council for Research on Women.
Sigal, J. A., Chester, C. E., & Cudjoe, T. R. (2017). Violence Against Women: Global Workplace Sexual Harassment and Domestic Violence. Psychology of Women: A Handbook of Issues and Theories, 341.
Sigal, Janet, Margaret S. Gibbs, Carl Goodrich, Tayyab Rashid, et al. (2005). Cross-Cultural Reactions to Academic Sexual Harassment: Effects of Individualist vs. Collectivist Culture and Gender of Participants. Sex Roles, Feb., Vol. 52, Iss. 3-4.
Sikes, P. (2006). Scandalous stories and dangerous liaisons: when female pupils and male teachers fall in love. Sex Education: Sexuality, Society and Learning, 6(3): 265-280.
Simon, Rita J. (ed). (1996). From Data to Public Policy: Affirmative Action, Sexual Harassment, Domestic Violence and Social Welfare.
Slater, A. (2019). Sexual Harassment Online: Shaming and Silencing Women in the Digital Age. Journal of Gender Studies, 28(6), 747-749. 10.1080/14753634.2019.1630080
Stan, Adele M. (ed). (1995). Debating Sexual Correctness: Pornography, Sexual Harassment, Date Rape, and the Politics of Sexual Equality. New York: Delta.
Stanko, Elizabeth A. (1985). Intimate Intrusions: Women’s Experience of Male Violence. London & Boston: Routledge & Kegan Paul.
Stanko, Elizabeth A. (1996). Reading danger: Sexual harassment, anticipation and self-protection. In Hester, Marianne, Kelly, Liz and Radford, Jill. (eds.). Women, Violence and Male Power: Feminist Research, Activism and Practice. Buckingham & Philadelphia: Open University Press.
Stanley, Sue, and Liz Wise. (1987). Georgie Porgie: Sexual Harassment in Everyday Life. London & New York: Pandora.
Stockdale, M., T. Logan, et al. (2009). Sexual Harassment and Posttraumatic Stress Disorder: Damages Beyond Prior Abuse. Law and Human Behavior 33(5): 405-418.
Stockdale, Margaret S. (ed). (1996). Sexual Harassment in the Workplace: Perspectives, Frontiers, and Response Strategies. Sage.
Includes Saal, Frank E. Men’s misperceptions of women’s interpersonal behaviors and sexual harassment.
Strouse, J. S., Goodwin, M. P., & Roscoe, B. (1994). Correlates of attitudes toward sexual harassment among early adolescents. Sex Roles, 31, 559-577.
Sumrall, Amber Coverdale, and Dena Taylor. (eds.). (1992). Sexual Harassment: Women Speak Out. Freedom, California: The Crossing Press.
Sweeney, B. N. (2014). Masculine status, sexual performance, and the sexual stigmatization of women. Symbolic Interaction, 37(3), 369-390.
Terrance, C., A. Logan, and D. Peters. (2004). Perceptions of Peer Sexual Harassment Among High School Students. Sex Roles, 51(7): 479-490.
Tester, G. (2008). An Intersectional Analysis of Sexual Harassment in Housing. Gender & Society, 22(3): 349-366.
Thomae, M., & Pina, A. (2015). Sexist humor and social identity: the role of sexist humor in men’s in-group cohesion, sexual harassment, rape proclivity, and victim blame. Humor, 28(2), 187-204.
Thomas, Alison M., and Celia Kitzinger. (eds.). (1997). Sexual Harassment: Contemporary Feminist Perspectives. Open University Press.
Timmerman, G. (2003). Sexual Harassment of Adolescents Perpetrated by Teachers and by Peers: An Exploration of the Dynamics of Power, Culture, and Gender in Secondary Schools. Sex Roles, 48(5): 231-244.
Timmerman, G. (2004). Adolescents’ Psychological Health and Experiences with Unwanted Sexual Behavior at School. Adolescence, 39(156): 817-826.
Timmerman, G. (2005). A comparison between girls’ and boys’ experiences of unwanted sexual behaviour in secondary schools. Educational Research, 47(3): 291-306.
Timmerman, Greetje, and Cristien Bajema. (1999). Incidence and Methodology in Sexual Harassment Research in Northwest Europe. Women’s Studies International Forum, 22(6): 673-681.
Timmerman, Greetje, and Cristien Bajema. (1999). Sexual harassment in Northwest Europe: A cross-cultural comparison. European Journal of Women’s Studies, Volume 6 Issue 4, November.
Timmerman, Greetje. (2002). A Comparison Between Unwanted Sexual Behavior by Teachers and by Peers in Secondary Schools. Journal of Youth and Adolescence, Volume 31, Number 5, October, pp. 397-404.
Timmerman, Greetje. (2003). Sexual harassment of adolescents perpetrated by teachers and by peers: An exploration of the dynamics of power, culture, and gender in secondary schools. Sex Roles, March, Vol. 48, Iss. 5/6.
Tinkler, J. E. (2013). How do sexual harassment policies shape gender beliefs? An exploration of the moderating effects of norm adherence and gender. Social science research, 42(5), 1269-1283.
Trioli, Virginia. (1996). Generation f: Sex, Power & the Young Feminist. Port Melbourne: Minerva .
Wall, Edmund. (ed). (1992). Sexual Harassment: Confrontations and Decisions. Buffalo. New York: Prometheus Books.
Weiss, Denna S., and Richard N. Lalonde. (2001). Response of female undergraduates to scenarios of sexual harassment by male professors and teaching assistants. Canadian Journal of Behavioural Science, July, Vol. 33, Iss. 3.
Welsh, Sandy, Jacquie Carr, Barbara MacQuarrie, and Audrey Huntley. (2006). “I’m Not Thinking of It as Sexual Harassment”: Understanding Harassment across Race and Citizenship. Gender & Society, February, Vol. 20, No. 1, pp. 87-107.
Welsh, Sandy. (1999). Gender and sexual harassment. Annual Review of Sociology. Palo Alto: Vol. 25.
Welsh, Sandy. (2000). The multidimensional nature of sexual harassment: An empirical analysis of women’s sexual harassment complaints. Violence Against Women, 6(2), 118-141.
Wessler, S. L. and L. L. De Andrade (2006). Slurs, Stereotypes, and Student Interventions: Examining the Dynamics, Impact, and Prevention of Harassment in Middle and High School. Journal of Social Issues, 62(3): 511-532.
Wetzel, R., and N. W. Brown. (2000). Student-Generated Sexual Harassment in Secondary Schools: Bergin & Garvey.
Wiener, Richard L., Ryan Winter, Melanie Rogers, and Lucy Arnot. (2004). The Effects of Prior Workplace Behavior on Subsequent Sexual Harassment Judgments. Law and Human Behavior, Feb., Vol. 28, Iss. 1.
Williams, Karen B. (1992) Escalating Commitment to a Relationship: The Sexual Harassment Trap. Sex Roles, 27: 1/2, July.
Willness, C. R., Steel, P., & Lee, K. (2007). A meta‐analysis of the antecedents and consequences of workplace sexual harassment. Personnel Psychology, 60(1), 127-162.
Wilson, Fiona. (2000). The social construction of sexual harassment and assault of university students. Journal of Gender Studies, July, Vol. 9, Iss. 2.
Workman, Jane E., and Kim K.P. Johnson. (1991) The Role of Cosmetics in Attributions About Sexual Harassment. Sex Roles, 24: 11/12, June: 759-769.
Wuensch, Karl L., Matthew W. Campbell, Frederick C. Kesler, and Charles H. Moore. (2002). Racial bias in decisions made by mock jurors evaluating a case of sexual harassment. The Journal of Social Psychology, Oct., Vol. 142, Iss. 5.
Yagil, D. (2008). When the customer is wrong: A review of research on aggression and sexual harassment in service encounters. Aggression and Violent Behavior, 13(2): 141-152.
Zippel, Kathrin S. (2006). The Politics of Sexual Harassment: A Comparative Study of the United States, the European Union, and Germany. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.