Report urges bars and clubs to protect women from sexual aggression

Study by researchers from the University of Liverpool, Liverpool John Moores University and the University of Birmingham looked at how women deal with unwanted advances on nights out. Report by Tony McDonough

Women on nights out frequently have to deal with unwanted sexual aggression

 

Bars and nightclubs must do more to protect women from sexual aggression, according to researchers at Liverpool’s two biggest universities.

A study carried out by researchers from the University of Liverpool, Liverpool John Moores University and the University of Birmingham, looked at women dealt with unwanted sexual attention when in bars and nightclubs.

They found increasing numbers of women are prepared to “speak back” to sexual harassment while enjoying a night out with female friends. They are prepared to confront the men responsible and tell them clearly and robustly that their behaviour is unacceptable.

But they also found that such a response – which they dub “feisty femininity” – is complex and can result in backlash. It, therefore, needs businesses within the night time economy to take seriously unwanted encounters in order to foster safer venues and help to end gendered violence.

They conducted focus groups with young women in Liverpool and discovered two broad forms for unwanted sexual attention when women went out… ‘the pick-up routine’, which men used to start sexual encounters; and ‘showing off for the lads’. This is where males engage in undermining and abusive interactions with women for the purpose of impressing their male friends.

Encountering ‘the pick-up routine’ tended to prompt the use of ‘diplomatic’ rejection responses, which were carefully constructed in order to manage a potentially aggressive reaction. In contrast, ‘showing off for the lads’ approaches were more likely to spark a robust ‘feisty’ rebuttal from the targeted woman.

Article author Dr Clare Gunby, from the University of Birmingham’s Institute of Applied Health Research, said: “Young people, globally, are starting to demand accountability for sexist structures and norms, partly due to the re-emergence of feminism and activism on university campuses and beyond.

“Women practicing ‘feisty femininity’ overtly resist unwanted encounters and this approach can arguably play a role in ending gendered violence. However, such responses may expose women to risks and place the labour of managing unwanted incidents onto women directly.

“Indeed, our participants felt that staff in nightclubs and bars did not take their concerns around safety seriously. Hence, women’s informal strategies for dealing with unwanted attention become especially important because more formal lines of recourse often remain unavailable.

“Venues must, therefore, play a key role in creating a safe environment that makes it clear that unwanted sexual aggression will not be tolerated. There must be a multipronged approach across the night time economy to addressing sexual violence.”

The researchers found women employed a number of strategies to deal with unwanted approaches

 

The study sheds light on women’s navigation of unwanted sexual attention when in bars and nightclubs – about which little is known, especially in the UK context. In addition to ‘feisty femininity’, the researchers found that women had developed three other risk management approaches:

  • Emotion management’ – offering a tactful and diplomatic explanation for their lack of interest (in order to mitigate negative reactions when rejecting men).
  • ‘Men as protector’ – specifically going out with male friends or using a boyfriend (actual and mythical) to reduce the likelihood of an unwanted encounter.
  • ‘From individualism to camaraderie among the girls’ – cutting an evening short, moving to another venue, laughing off unwanted attention or stepping in to stop men from exploiting drunken friends and strangers.

Dr Gunby added: “There was a shared reticence to report unwanted incidents to venue staff or police as women felt that any report would be shrugged off and that no one would care due to the perceived normality of such practices when out in bars and nightclubs.

“The lack of formal sanction for such behaviours could arguably play a role in their maintenance, prompting women to fill this gap by taking it upon themselves to monitor friends and strangers.”

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