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02 June 2021 | Story Associate Prof Denine Smith | Photo Supplied
Assoc. Prof Denine Smit is a lecturer in the Department of Mercantile Law, Faculty of Law, University of the Free State (UFS) where she currently lectures several modules with her focus on Labour Law.

“The modern workplace is not a garden of friendly Buddhas smiling upon us” – it has become cutting-edge, cut-throat, and is a breeding ground for interpersonal violence, inclusive of bullying and (sexual) harassment. In South Africa, the country’s notorious problem with violence in broader society is perhaps partly to blame. Yet, when workplace bullying or harassment intersects with employee depression, this could be a problem that very few workplaces can cope with.

The issue of workplace violence undoubtedly requires attention: from the 1944 Declaration of Philadelphia to the 2019 International Labour Organisation Recommendation 206 and Convention 190, both of which call for a world of work free from violence and harassment. South Africa’s National Development Plan, too, confirms every person’s right to a working life that is conducive to productivity and embraces freedom, equality, human dignity, and security. Despite their core right to physical and psychological integrity, millions of workers worldwide suffer from the scars of workplace violence; nevertheless, South African employers and lawmakers remain sluggish in their responses. South Africa is yet to sign ILO Convention 109/2019 dealing with and preventing all forms of violence against women and men in the workplace. The Revised Draft Code of Good Practice on the Prevention and Elimination of Harassment in the Workplace (dated 30 March 2021), inclusive of sexual harassment, bullying, and racial harassment, has been tendered before Parliament once again. This is, however, merely a guiding document that encourages employers to adopt policies in this regard, and there is no sanction for non-compliance with such a code.

Violence

In their 2019 research, Escribano et al. suggest that violence at work refers to “intentional verbal and physical actions (verbal abuse, physical assaults, harassment, bullying, intimidation, threatening, discrimination, etc.)”, all within a specific organisational culture (Escribano, Beneit and Garcia, 2019:4). Workplace violence, the authors continue, is a form of aggression intended to cause physical or psychological harm, which, in turn, challenges the safety, well-being and health of professionals and affects entire organisations.  Workplace violence, of which bullying and sexual harassment form an integral part, not only leads to physical harm, but also includes non-physical harm such as cognitive effects (disbelief and a threat to personal integrity), emotional effects (anger and sadness), social effects (insecurity, impaired relationships with colleagues, and damage to social identity), and, of course, psychological effects (such as anxiety, irritability, depression and, at its worst, post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD)). Violence also has negative effects on the employer in that worker relations, engagement, productivity, and the reputation of the enterprise suffer. This excludes costs incurred in terms of legal fees, absenteeism, and high staff turnover. 

South African employees come to work already stressed and anxious, and then we add bullying and sexual harassment to these workplaces, and yet we expect high performance from our employees. Societal violence in South Africa is problematic. We have been dubbed the rape capital of the world – with a sexual offence being reported every 25 seconds; an average of 58 murders are reported per day, and a general increase in interpersonal crime year on year has been reported by Stats SA. The most vulnerable remain females in a working environment.

Bullying

In South Africa, bullying is not a cause of action in itself; the New Amended Draft Code of Good Practice on the Prevention and Elimination of Harassment in the Workplace (dated 30 March 2021) has been tabled before Parliament again but has not yet been signed into law. According to this guiding document, bullying is seen as a form of violence and harassment in South Africa, and employers are merely encouraged to adopt policies in line with ILO Convention 109/2019. Bullying is reportedly the most adverse type of social behaviour worldwide. It does not only include physical behaviour, but also psychological ‘warfare’. It can occur as a once-off act or as repeated negative acts perpetrated over time. Seventy percent of bullying is suffered by employees from management, but employees can also muster the power to bully employers; bullying can also occur between employees. These are all acts for which the employer could be held vicariously liable, if not addressed. The power differential lies at the heart of bullying. Thirty percent of employees in a limited study in South Africa reported being bullied, but in an earlier study, the International Labour Organisation (ILO) found that 80% of South African employees reported having been exposed to violence.

Different countries are dealing with bullying differently; the United Kingdom treats it as a violation of dignity, the United States of America deals with bullying as a form of unfair discrimination (if it falls within one of the five protected grounds). Australia deals with it in health and safety legislation, Nordic countries have specific legislation prohibiting and dealing with bullying or mobbing at work, and France has criminalised bullying.

Bullying is costly to organisations in terms of lost productivity, turnover of the wrong people, legal costs, absenteeism, workdays lost, and bad reputation. It can manifest overtly and covertly and the intent to bully is not a prerequisite for bullying to occur. Examples of bullying can be social exclusion, taking credit for another’s work, withholding important information or manipulation of information received, to mention but a few. Bullying costs Australian workplaces $36 billion per year, and in the USA, 41% of bullied women and 36% of bullied men left their jobs due to bullying. 

The ill effects of bullying on the targets thereof include depression, physical ill health, increased stress responses and PTSD, and it presents major problems that need to be addressed in itself.

Sexual harassment

There is no firm definition of sexual harassment in South Africa, but a Code of Good Practice dealing with Sexual Harassment at work (which forms part of the Employment Equity Act), sets out a test and places obligations on employers and employees. The employer could be held vicariously liable in terms of certain legal requirements if an employee is guilty of sexual harassment. There are no reliable statistics to indicate the severity of the problem, which is regarded as a gap in the law pertaining to sexual harassment in South Africa. What is known, is that ‘toxic masculinity’ and the power differential are some of the reasons why sexual harassment is still rife in South Africa. In the United States, for instance, one in three women is believed to have faced harassment in the workplace, yet 70% of women say they have never reported it.

In terms of causes, many instances of sexual harassment involve a power differential, with older men in authoritative positions being the perpetrators. (See SA Broadcasting Corporation Ltd v Grogan NO 2006 (27) ILJ 1519 (LC) 1532A; Gaga v Anglo Platinum Ltd 2012 (3) BLLR 285 (LAC)). The social-cultural theory of sexual harassment implies that sexual harassment is often used by males to demonstrate their perceived superiority over females (Khumalo, Gwandure and Mayekiso, 2015:106.) Where males sexually harass fellow males, it could be seen as a demonstration of the perpetrator’s manhood and power by undermining the masculinity of his victim (Khumalo, Gwandure and Mayekiso, 2015:107).

For more information on the power differential, see  the UN Women Handbook addressing Violence and Harassment against women at work (2019).

Some of the ill effects of sexual harassment are depression, PTSD, physical illness, and even disability could follow sexual harassment victims (see here for the full article.) Employers also carry direct and indirect costs where sexual harassment has occurred.   
Depression

Sixty-five percent of bullying victims displayed symptoms of depression up to five years after having been bullied. A grey area in South African law is where depression does not lead to disability, but the depressed employee has to be reasonably accommodated by the employer; this presents a problem that needs to be addressed in future. 

Many employees lose or leave their jobs after bullying or when they were targets of sexual harassment. In a country such as ours where unemployment figures have reached an all-time high and the loss of a job is equated to a ‘financial death sentence’, we need to pay attention to workplace violence, bullying, and harassment, and take note of depression as an ill effect that should not only be managed in the workplace, but also be prevented. 

Opinion article by Prof (Assoc.) DM (Denine) Smit, Department of Mercantile Law, Faculty of Law, University of the Free State  

News Archive

UFS researchers receive awards from the NSTF
2008-06-04

The recipients of the two awards are, from the left: Prof. Jan van der Westhuizen, UFS Department of Chemistry, Dr Susan Bonnet, UFS Department of Chemistry, Prof. Thinus van der Merwe, FARMOVS-PAREXEL, Prof. Maryke Labuschagne, UFS Department of Plant Sciences, and Prof. Ken Swart, FARMOVS-PAREXEL.
Photo: Lacea Loader

  

UFS researchers receive awards from the NSTF   

The University of the Free State (UFS) last week received two prestigious awards from the National Science and Technology Forum (NSTF) during its tenth gala-awards ceremony held in Kempton Park.

Prof. Maryke Labuschagne from the Department of Plant Sciences at the UFS was the female recipient of the research capacity-development award over the last ten years. She received the award for her successful mentoring of black researchers and students. The award, sponsored by Eskom, includes a prize of R100 000 which will be used for research purposes.  

A team consisting of Prof. Jan van der Westhuizen and Dr Susan Bonnet from the Department of Chemistry at the UFS and Prof. Kenneth Swart and Prof. Thinus van der Merwe from FARMOVS–PAREXEL received the innovation award for an outstanding contribution to science, engineering and technology from either an individual or a team over the last ten years.
 
Prof. Labuschagne, an expert in the field of plant breeding and food security in Africa, received the award for her contribution to the training and development of black students and researchers in this field. Various black students successfully completed their postgraduate studies under her guidance at the UFS during the past ten years, with positive results.

Research by her South African students has led to a firmly entrenched research relationship between the Agricultural Research Council (ARC) and the UFS, while research by her local and international students has culminated in no less than 82 publications over the last decade.

It has also led to the establishment of collaboration agreements with universities and research institutes in Malawi, Kenya, Uganda and Tanzania – among others with the University of Malawi where Prof. Labuschagne and her students are involved in the International Programme in the Chemical Sciences (IPICS) of the Uppsala University in Sweden. The project focuses on the study of genetics and chemistry of tropical roots and tuber crops in Malawi. This has led to collaboration with international research organisations and has generated overseas funding.

The combined team from FARMOVS–PAREXEL and the UFS won an award for the synthesis of drug analogues used as reference products during the analysis of the drug concentration in blood, from existing and new drugs registered nationally and internationally.

The project resulted in capacity building in synthetic organic chemistry, mass spectrometry and chromatography: Five master’s degrees were completed, seven are in progress, and six postgraduate students commenced with Ph.D.’s.

The skills transferred during this project are already being applied to examine the properties of indigenous medicinal plants as part of the recently established UFS novel drugs and bioactive compound cluster.

Applied Biosystems, the Canadian manufacturer of mass spectrometers, donated equipment to the value of more than R10 million for this project. As a result the UFS is one of the few universities in the world that can offer postgraduate training in bioanalytical chemistry.

Prof. Hendrik Swart, head of the Department of Physics at the UFS, and Dr Martin Ntwaeaborwa, senior lecturer at the Department of Physics were finalist in the research- capacity developer and black-researcher categories respectively.
The NSTF awards gives recognition to the outstanding contributions of individuals and groups to science, engineering and technology. This includes all practising scientists, engineers and technologists across the system of innovation, including, for example, teachers and students in mathematics, science and technology. The NSTF represents government, science councils, professional bodies, higher education, business and civil society.

Altogether nine individuals and three organisations were presented with the NSTF Awards trophy by the Minister of Science and Technology, Mr Mosibudi Mangena.

Media Release
Issued by: Lacea Loader
Assistant Director: Media Liaison
Tel:  051 401 2584
Cell:  083 645 2454
E-mail:  loaderl.stg@ufs.ac.za
4 June 2008

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