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26 Queen's L.J. 101 (2000-2001)
Same-Sex Sexual Harassment in Employment

handle is hein.journals/queen26 and id is 111 raw text is: Same-Sex Sexual Harassment in
Employment
Janine Benedet*
The author examines how courts and tribunals have dealt with the issue of same-sex
sexual harassment. By exploring both Canadian and American jurisprudence, she
identifies the two principal conceptual models that have been used by courts and
tribunals in defining and identifying same-sex sexual harassment: the differential
treatment model and the sexual content model. She eventually rejects both in favour of
a model based on substantive equality.
The differential treatment model looks for harassment that would not have occurred
but for the complainant's sex. While this is helpful in working environments that have
employees of both sexes, it is not helpful in addressing sexual harassment in single-sex
working environments or where complainants are of both sexes. Conversely, the sexual
content model looks to whether the conduct creates a sexually charged atmosphere, for
example through jokes and other sexual comments. The author argues that this
approach is also insufficient in single-sex workplaces or where the sexual content is not
explicitly discriminatory.
The author instead opts for an approach based on substantive equality. Such an
approach, rather than looking at the nature of the harassment or at the sex of the
complainants, focuses on the effects of the alleged harassment. By taking into account
the social context of the harassment, the substantive equality approach effectively
eliminates the problems with the other two models and addresses the discriminatory
nature of all sexual harassment.
Introduction
I.   Canadian Decisions on Same-Sex Sexual Harassment
II. United   States Decisions -     Limits of the Differential Treatment
Approach
III. United States Decisions - Limits of the Sexual Content Approach
IV. Specific Statutory Definitions
V.   Sexual Orientation Harassment
*Assistant Professor, Osgoode Hall Law School, Toronto, Ontario. I am grateful
for the research assistance of Tyler Powell and Andrea Unikowsky. An earlier
version of this paper also benefited from research by Lara Edwards and Wendy
Atkinson of Heenan Blaikie, Toronto.
J. Benedet                                                               101

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