Wednesday, 4 December 2019

Accepting or rejecting the label: how gay employees cope with harassment at work

an article by Dilusha Madushanka Liyanage and Arosha Adikaram (University of Colombo, Sri Lanka) published in Gender in Management Volume 34 Issue 8 (2019)

Abstract

Purpose
The purpose of this paper is to understand how gay employees, as labeled deviants, cope with heterosexist harassment at work in an Asian culture of hegemonic heterosexual masculinity, using the modified labeling theory.

Design/methodology/approach
Using qualitative research approach, in-depth interviews were carried out with 16 self-identified gay employees.

Findings
Results revealed how the coping strategies of gay employees, in the face of harassment, are entwined with the labeling and stigma leading to diverse and complex coping strategies. Several broader coping strategies were thus identified based on whether the participants accepted the label of deviance and stigma and whether they were open about their sexuality. These broader coping strategies are support seeking, confrontation, inaction, quitting and, stigma and labeling avoidance strategies. Under these broader strategies, there were also sub strategies such as seeking social support, organizational support, legal support the support of the wise, as well as secrecy and social withdrawal.

Originality/value
These findings will advance the knowledge in coping strategies of heterosexist harassments at work as well as knowledge in harassment of gay employees, in hegemonic heterosexual cultures.


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