Profiles in coping: responses to sexual harassment across persons, organizations and cultures

Cortina, Lilia M. and Wasti, S. Arzu (2005) Profiles in coping: responses to sexual harassment across persons, organizations and cultures. Journal of Applied Psychology, 90 (1). pp. 182-192. ISSN 0021-9010

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Abstract

This study explicates the complexity of sexual harassment coping behavior among 4 diverse samples of working women: (a) working-class Hispanic Americans, (b) working-class Anglo Americans, (c) professional Turks, and (d) professional Anglo Americans. K-means cluster analysis revealed 3 common harassment coping profiles: (a) detached, (b) avoidant negotiating, and (c) support seeking. The authors then tested an integrated framework of coping profile determinants, involving social power, stressor severity, social support, and culture. Analysis of variance, chi-square, and discriminant function results identified significant determinants at each of the 4 levels of this ecological model. These findings underscore the importance of focusing on whole patterns of experience-and considering influences at the level of the individual employee and multiple levels of the surrounding context-when studying how women cope with workplace sexual harassment.
Item Type: Article
Subjects: Q Science > QP Physiology
Divisions: Sabancı Business School
Depositing User: Arzu S. Wasti
Date Deposited: 15 Dec 2005 02:00
Last Modified: 25 May 2011 14:03
URI: https://research.sabanciuniv.edu/id/eprint/664

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