I recently read an article in last months Nat Geo about how sexual harassment in the science/academic sciences workplace is taking a bit longer to root out than other fields. This is partially because grant funding often can be tied to a researcher who is a creep/harasser, and there is a worry that big funding opportunities could be lost if that person gets axed. The other issue is that the workplace in science research can be very formal (a lab on campus, for example) and very informal (a field research station in Antarctica.)
One comment by Kathryn Clancy, however, caught my attention: Too often the story is the same: A man sexually harasses a woman, the woman reports it, and she gets told that’s just how it is. There are variations on this theme: women harassing women, people harassing those they don’t think conform to their gender well enough, women of color receiving a toxic blend of racial and gender harassment. Want a story of women being mocked when they need to urinate and being body shamed if they eat dinner? I’ve got one of those. How about a man who has a mistress that students at his field site have to keep secret from his wife and kids at home? I’ve got a few of those.
That last one made me wonder; since when is someones personal life any business of their coworkers, or any grounds for termination?
In this example, Clancy makes it sound like the Research Advisor/Leader might have a mistress, and this makes the students at his field sites uncomfortable. Now, provided said mistress isn't a student or a direct co-worker, and as long as this dude isn't going into graphic detail about his sexual exploits while in the workplace (which in field sites is also tricky, what defines the workplace?) Then he shouldn't face termination for his behavior, no matter how repugnant.
Likewise, someone shouldn't be blamed for sexual harassment for mentioning that they're gay, or that they have multiple wives (even if that's illegal) or that they are single and like dolls. If they are going into detail about their sex lives, obviously that's a problem, but is the mere act of mentioning a secret trist or perhaps an odd interest grounds for termination if others feels it's a kink?
I have a feeling that in Clancy's case, a supervisor was going into details about his mistress, which is obviously unprofessional, but I think it illustrates the need for discussion and clarity about what constitutes "the workplace." When you're out in the middle of no-where after a long day studying rocks or ferns or microbes in a stream, sitting around a campfire drinking beers, are you working? If you're a journalist who just got back from a warzone and you're sitting around in a hotel room with coworkers drinking beers and not talking about work, are you working?
Have we reached a point where a co-worker must remain a co-worker and never can one befriend a co-worker, even of the same sex, for fear that we classify every exchange as "on the clock?"