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Addressing the Growing Inadequacies of the <Emphasis Type="Italic">Ellerth</Emphasis>/<Emphasis Type="Italic">Faragher</Emphasis> Affirmative Defense: Fashioning a Sensible and Feasible Solution
Authors:Email author" target="_blank">Glenn?M?GomesEmail author  James?M?Owens  James?F?Morgan
Institution:(1) Management Department, College of Business, California State University, Chico, Chico, California, USA;(2) Management Department, College of Business, California State University, Chico, Chico, California 95929-0031, USA
Abstract:Public policy seeks an equitable balance between the rights and duties of both employers and employees in creating a workplace free of sexual harassment. This goal is particularly difficult to achieve when supervisors create a hostile work environment. The U.S. Supreme Courtrsquos decisions in Ellerth and Faragher created an affirmative defense against vicarious liability for employers, but subsequent applications of these rulings have been inconsistent and problematic. Courts and legislators need to (1) choose the appropriate standard of employer liability for sexual harassment committed by supervisors, and (2) decide what, if any, defenses are available to employers when employees bring claims of sexual harassment. We conclude that holding employers strictly liable while allowing for the limitation of damages based on ldquoavoidable consequences,rdquo as recently adopted by the California Supreme Court in McGinnis, is preferable to other liability standards and defenses.
Keywords:sexual harassment  avoidable consequences  strict liability  affirmative defense
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