2020 - Female to Female Hostility @Workplace: All you Need to Know
Date2020-08-11
Deadline2020-08-11
VenueOnline event, USA - United States
KeywordsFactors of women's bullying; Illegal harassment; Female to Female Hostility
Websitehttps://bit.ly/30Uh8fW
Topics/Call fo Papers
OVERVIEW
This training program will discuss whether women are more hostile among each other in the workplace. It will discuss sexism and stereotypes in our perceptions of women and men's bullying, the nexus of bullying and harassment, and the impact of bullying on witnesses.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
Theories as to whether women are more hostile to each other than to men
Sexism and stereotypes in our perceptions of women and men's bullying
The nexus of bullying and harassment
Impact of bullying on witnesses
Tort laws
Tokenism
WHY SHOULD YOU ATTEND
This webinar will discuss the phenomenon - or lack thereof- of women's hostility to other women, outline what one should do if bullied, and discuss management's role in the prevention and intervention of the behavior. Research suggests that men and women employ different tactics in bullying.
Because women's ways of bullying are generally more subtle, managers may not recognize it as bullying and ignore the behavior thereby giving tacit approval for it to continue. This leads to poor morale, lack of trust in management, and poor performance, absenteeism, and turnover.
Are women really each other's worse enemy or is it just a myth and a stereotype?
What does research show about women's hostility to other women, sometimes called bullying in the workplace?
Is female to female bullying an issue that deserves attention apart from general workplace bullying?
Do we have different expectations of women's behavior at work than we do of men's behavior?
Do we have a responsibility, as women, to support other women at work?
AREAS COVERED
To describe women's ways of bullying
To discuss the theoretical causes and contributing factors of women's bullying
To determine if bullying could be illegal harassment
To explore the impact of women bullying their colleagues
To identify management's role in the prevention and intervention of women's bullying
To list the steps to take if targeted by a bully
WHO WILL BENEFIT?
Human Resources Generalists
Managers
Directors
Women Owners
HR Managers
Controllers
Supervisors
Office Managers
Accounts Managers
Anyone in Management at all Levels
SPEAKER
Dr. Susan Strauss is a national and international speaker, trainer, consultant and a recognized expert investigator on workplace and school harassment and bullying. She conducts harassment and bullying investigations and functions as an expert witness in harassment and bullying lawsuits. Her clients are from business, education, healthcare, law, and government organizations from both the public and private sector.
For more detail please click on this below link:
https://bit.ly/30Uh8fW
Email: support-AT-247compliance.us
Tel: +1-(707)-743-8122
This training program will discuss whether women are more hostile among each other in the workplace. It will discuss sexism and stereotypes in our perceptions of women and men's bullying, the nexus of bullying and harassment, and the impact of bullying on witnesses.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
Theories as to whether women are more hostile to each other than to men
Sexism and stereotypes in our perceptions of women and men's bullying
The nexus of bullying and harassment
Impact of bullying on witnesses
Tort laws
Tokenism
WHY SHOULD YOU ATTEND
This webinar will discuss the phenomenon - or lack thereof- of women's hostility to other women, outline what one should do if bullied, and discuss management's role in the prevention and intervention of the behavior. Research suggests that men and women employ different tactics in bullying.
Because women's ways of bullying are generally more subtle, managers may not recognize it as bullying and ignore the behavior thereby giving tacit approval for it to continue. This leads to poor morale, lack of trust in management, and poor performance, absenteeism, and turnover.
Are women really each other's worse enemy or is it just a myth and a stereotype?
What does research show about women's hostility to other women, sometimes called bullying in the workplace?
Is female to female bullying an issue that deserves attention apart from general workplace bullying?
Do we have different expectations of women's behavior at work than we do of men's behavior?
Do we have a responsibility, as women, to support other women at work?
AREAS COVERED
To describe women's ways of bullying
To discuss the theoretical causes and contributing factors of women's bullying
To determine if bullying could be illegal harassment
To explore the impact of women bullying their colleagues
To identify management's role in the prevention and intervention of women's bullying
To list the steps to take if targeted by a bully
WHO WILL BENEFIT?
Human Resources Generalists
Managers
Directors
Women Owners
HR Managers
Controllers
Supervisors
Office Managers
Accounts Managers
Anyone in Management at all Levels
SPEAKER
Dr. Susan Strauss is a national and international speaker, trainer, consultant and a recognized expert investigator on workplace and school harassment and bullying. She conducts harassment and bullying investigations and functions as an expert witness in harassment and bullying lawsuits. Her clients are from business, education, healthcare, law, and government organizations from both the public and private sector.
For more detail please click on this below link:
https://bit.ly/30Uh8fW
Email: support-AT-247compliance.us
Tel: +1-(707)-743-8122
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Last modified: 2020-07-30 19:22:59