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420 pa rt FOUr tHE ORG aNiZ atiON aND tHE PEOPLE iN it
“But is it a small price to pay for severely damaging our
profit picture?” one of the members asked. Then he added, “I
needn’t remind you that our profit outlook directly affects
what we can offer our current employees in terms of salary
and fringe benefits. It directly affects our ability to revise our
salary schedule.” Finally, he asked Phyllis whether she’d
accept the board’s reducing everyone’s current compensa-
tion to meet what Phyllis termed the board’s “obligation to
the past.”
Despite its decided opposition to Phyllis’s proposal, the
board agreed to consider it and render a decision at its next
meeting. As a final broadside, Phyllis hinted that, if the board
didn’t comply with the committee’s request, the committee
was prepared to pursue legal action.
D i s C u s s i o n Q u e s t i o n s
1. If you were a board member, how would you vote?
Why?
2. What moral principles are involved in this case?
3. Do you think Phyllis Warren was unfair in taking
advantage
of the board’s implied admission of salary discrimination
on the basis of sex? Why or why not?
4. Do you think Phyllis was wrong in giving the board the
impression that her proposal enjoyed broad support?
Why or why not?
5. If the board rejects the committee’s request, do you
think the committee ought to sue? Give reasons.
in the Case of Vinson V. TayloR, hearD
before the federal district court for the District of Columbia,
Mechelle Vinson alleged that Sidney Taylor, her supervisor at
Capital City Federal Savings and Loan, had sexually harassed
her.71 But the facts of the case were contested.
In court Vinson testified that about a year after she began
working at the bank, Taylor asked her to have sexual rela-
tions with him. She claimed that Taylor said she “owed” him
because he had obtained the job for her. Although she
turned down Taylor at first, she eventually became involved
with him. She and Taylor engaged in sexual relations, she
said, both during and after business hours, in the remaining
three years she worked at the bank. The encounters included
intercourse in a bank vault and in a storage area in the bank
basement. Vinson also testified that Taylor often actually
“assaulted or raped” her. She contended that she was forced
to submit to Taylor or jeopardize her employment.
Taylor, for his part, denied the allegations. He testified that
he had never had sex with Vinson. On the contrary, he alleged
that Vinson had made advances toward him and that he had
C a se 11.4
Consenting to sexual harassment
43075_ch11_ptg01_hr_390-424.indd 420 8/13/12 1:35 PM
ch apter eleven JOB DiSCRimiN atiON 421
declined them. He contended that Vinson had brought the
charges against him to “get even” because of a work-related
dispute.
In its ruling on the case, the court held that if Vinson and
Taylor had engaged in a sexual relationship, that relationship
was voluntary on the part of Vinson and was not employment
related. The court also held that Capital City Federal Savings
and Loan did not have “notice” of the alleged harassment and
was therefore not liable. Although Taylor was Vinson’s super-
visor, the court reasoned that notice to him was not notice to
the bank.
Vinson appealed the case, and the Court of Appeals held
that the district court had erred in three ways. First, the dis-
trict court had overlooked the fact that there are two possi-
ble kinds of sexual harassment. Writing for the majority,
Chief Judge Spottswood Robinson distinguished cases in
which the victim’s continued employment or promotion is
conditioned on giving in to sexual demands and those cases
in which the victim must tolerate a “substantially discrimi-
natory work environment.” The lower court had failed to
consider whether Vinson’s case involved harassment of
the second kind.
Second, the higher court also overruled the district
court’s finding that because Vinson voluntarily engaged in
a sexual relationship with Taylor, she was not a victim of
sexual harassment. Voluntariness on Vinson’s part had
“no bearing,” the judge wrote, on “whether Taylor made
Vinson’s toleration of sexual harassment a condition of
her employment.” Third, the Court of Appeals held that
any discriminatory activity by a supervisor is attributable
to the employer, regardless of whether the employer had
specific notice.
In his dissent to the decision by the Court of Appeals, Judge
Robert Bork rejected the majority’s claim that “voluntariness”
in the movie North Country, Charlize theron plays a character
who has no choice but to take on a miner’s job in order to
survive as the mother of two. Confronted with unrelenting
verbal and physical abuse at the hands of her male coworkers,
she
fights back and ultimately wins a sexual harassment lawsuit.
W
ar
ne
r B
ro
th
er
s/
co
ur
te
sy
E
ve
re
tt
Co
lle
ct
io
n
43075_ch11_ptg01_hr_390-424.indd 421 8/13/12 1:35 PM
422 pa rt FOUr tHE ORG aNiZ atiON aND tHE PEOPLE iN it
did not automatically rule out harassment. He argued that this
position would have the result of depriving the accused per-
son of any defense, because he could no longer establish that
the supposed victim was really “a willing participant.” Judge
Bork contended further that an employer should not be held
vicariously liable for a supervisor’s acts that it didn’t know
about.
Eventually the case arrived at the U.S. Supreme Court,
which upheld the majority verdict of the Court of Appeals, stat-
ing that:
[T]he fact that sex-related conduct was “voluntary,”
in the sense that the complainant was not forced to
participate against her will, is not a defense to a
sexual harassment suit brought under Title VII. The
gravamen of any sexual harassment claim is that
the alleged sexual advances were “unwelcome.”. . .
The correct inquiry is whether respondent by her
conduct indicated that the alleged sexual advances
were unwelcome, not whether her actual participa-
tion in sexual intercourse was voluntary.
The Court, however, rejected the Court of Appeals’s
position that employers are strictly liable for the acts of their
supervisors, regardless of the particular circumstances.72
D i s C u s s i o n Q u e s t i o n s
1. According to her own testimony, Vinson acquiesced to
Taylor’s sexual demands. In this sense her behavior
was “voluntary.” Does the voluntariness of her behavior
mean that she had “consented” to Taylor’s advances?
Does it mean that they were “welcome”? Do you agree
that Vinson’s acquiescence shows there was no sexual
harassment? Which court was right about this? Defend
your position.
2. In your opinion, under what circumstances would
acquiescence be a defense to charges of sexual
harassment? When would it not be a defense?
Can you formulate a general rule for deciding such
cases?
3. Assuming the truth of Vinson’s version of the
case, do you think her employer, Capital City
Federal Savings and Loan, should be held liable
for sexual harassment it was not aware of? Should
the employer have been aware of it? Does the fact
that Taylor was a supervisor make a difference?
In general, when should an employer be liable for
harassment?
4. What steps do you think Vinson should have taken when
Taylor first pressed her for sex? Should she be blamed for
having given in to him? Assuming that there was sexual
harassment despite her acquiescence, does her going
along with Taylor make her partly responsible or mitigate
Taylor’s wrongdoing?
5. In court, Vinson’s allegations were countered by
Taylor’s version of the facts. Will there always be a
“your word against mine” problem in sexual harass-
ment cases? What could Vinson have done to
strengthen her case?
43075_ch11_ptg01_hr_390-424.indd 422 8/13/12 1:35 PM
Business Ethics Week Discussions
Week 10
"Consenting to Sexual Harassment" Please respond to the
following:
· Read Case 11.4: Consenting to Sexual Harassment, located
here or on page 420 in your textbook then respond to the
following questions. According to her own testimony, Vinson
acquiesced to Taylor’s sexual demands. In this sense her
behavior was “voluntary.” Does the voluntariness of her
behavior mean she had “consented” to Taylor’s advances? Does
it mean they were “welcome”? Do you agree that Vinson’s
acquiescence shows there was no sexual harassment? Defend
your position.
I attach the case study in a separate document.
Part 2
Beauty Lies in the Eye of the Beholder, but Ugly is Ugly
Respond to the following questions. They count as part of your
participation post for the week.
1. Do you believe people are physically attractive or physically
ugly? Explain.
2. Are there jobs that should require physical attractiveness as
a criterion for employment? Explain.
3. Do you think ugliness should become a protected class?
Explain.
Part 3
Gender pay gap isn't a problem and opportunities are available
to all, say men. But women take a different view
Please click on the link below and answer the question. Note
that this qualfies as part of your discussion and extra credit
posts.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/money/smallbusiness/article-
2984328/Gender-pay-gap-isn-t-problem-say-men-women-
different-view.html
1. Do you agree with the views held my men per the survey
results?
2. Beyond education, what can we do to ensure gender pay
equity?
Bottom of Form
Discussion Week 11
Sow a Seed
As we get ready to part company, I want to sow a seed into your
lives by way of sharing a poem that means a lot to me and hope
you find it equally useful.
https://youtu.be/6X8YnCq6UME
Feel free to sow a seed by way of poems, songs, quotes, and
other artistic expressions.
Shalom!
Hum112
Week 9
"Government and the Arts; Abstract Expressionism and Music"
Please respond to the following, using sources under the
Explore heading as the basis of your response:
· Examine the U.S. Government's support during the Great
Depression for programs, such as the Federal Arts Project, the
Federal Writers' Project, and other such efforts. Determine
whether or not such projects were good government investments
during those hard times, and provide two (2) examples that
support your viewpoint. Determine in what ways the U.S.
government currently tries to support the arts.State whether you
agree or disagree with the perception of Abstract Expressionism
as exemplifying individualism and freedom. Explain the reasons
for your views. Compare and contrast one (1) example of
Abstract Expressionist visual art to John Cage’s musical
compositions. After reviewing the pages and Websites below,
explain how an abstract expressionist artist might respond to the
assertion "my kid could paint that". Explain your position on
that assertion.
Explore:
Government and the Arts
· Chapter 37 (pp. 1228-1231), Federal support for the arts
· Government helping the arts in hard times
at http://www.smithsonianmag.com/arts-culture/1934-Picturing-
Hard-
Times.html and http://www.pbs.org/speak/seatosea/powerprose/
wpa/
·
Week 10
"Twentieth Century African-American Artists; Postmodern
Architecture" Please respond to the following, using sources
under the Explore heading as the basis of your response:
· Choose two (2) of the following late 20th century African-
American artists, and compare and contrast their art: Bearden,
Lawrence, Basquiat, or Colescott. Describe specific elements of
the works from the chosen artists that represent the multiplicity
of the African-American experience. Identify one (1) of these
works (or some other by an African American artist) that you
would like in your workplace, and explain why. Choose one (1)
example of architecture that you believe best exemplifies the
characteristic post-modern style. Provide a rationale for your
selection, and describe two (2) of the features of post-modern
style that you find intriguing.
Explore:
African American Artists of the Twentieth Century
· Chapter 35 (p. 1167) and Chapter 36 (p. 1180) on Jacob
Lawrence
· Chapter 39 (pp. 1285-1286) on Romare Bearden
· Chapter 40 (pp. 1326-1327) on Jean-Michel Basquiat
· Jacob Lawrence, New York Museum of Modern Art (MoMA)
at http://www.moma.org/collection/artist.php?artist_id=3418
· Basquiat and Robert Colescott, Washington DC's Corcoran
Museum at http://www2.corcoran.org/30americans/artists/
· Romare Bearden video, San Francisco's Museum of Modern
Art at http://www.sfmoma.org/explore/multimedia/videos/205
Postmodern Architecture
· Chapter 40 (pp. 1312-1321) for examples of post-modern
architecture
· Post-modern buildings of
renown: http://www.greatbuildings.com/types/styles/post_moder
n.html
Week 11
"Reflection" Respond to the following:
· Identify three (3) ideas that you learned in the course that
surprised, confused, or intrigued you, and explain the reasons
why. Write three to four (3-4) sentences about your cultural
event experience for Assignment 3.
HH
420 pa rt FOUr tHE ORG aNiZ atiON aND tHE PEOPLE iN itBut.docx

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420 pa rt FOUr tHE ORG aNiZ atiON aND tHE PEOPLE iN itBut.docx

  • 1. 420 pa rt FOUr tHE ORG aNiZ atiON aND tHE PEOPLE iN it “But is it a small price to pay for severely damaging our profit picture?” one of the members asked. Then he added, “I needn’t remind you that our profit outlook directly affects what we can offer our current employees in terms of salary and fringe benefits. It directly affects our ability to revise our salary schedule.” Finally, he asked Phyllis whether she’d accept the board’s reducing everyone’s current compensa- tion to meet what Phyllis termed the board’s “obligation to the past.” Despite its decided opposition to Phyllis’s proposal, the board agreed to consider it and render a decision at its next meeting. As a final broadside, Phyllis hinted that, if the board didn’t comply with the committee’s request, the committee was prepared to pursue legal action. D i s C u s s i o n Q u e s t i o n s 1. If you were a board member, how would you vote? Why? 2. What moral principles are involved in this case? 3. Do you think Phyllis Warren was unfair in taking advantage of the board’s implied admission of salary discrimination on the basis of sex? Why or why not? 4. Do you think Phyllis was wrong in giving the board the impression that her proposal enjoyed broad support?
  • 2. Why or why not? 5. If the board rejects the committee’s request, do you think the committee ought to sue? Give reasons. in the Case of Vinson V. TayloR, hearD before the federal district court for the District of Columbia, Mechelle Vinson alleged that Sidney Taylor, her supervisor at Capital City Federal Savings and Loan, had sexually harassed her.71 But the facts of the case were contested. In court Vinson testified that about a year after she began working at the bank, Taylor asked her to have sexual rela- tions with him. She claimed that Taylor said she “owed” him because he had obtained the job for her. Although she turned down Taylor at first, she eventually became involved with him. She and Taylor engaged in sexual relations, she said, both during and after business hours, in the remaining three years she worked at the bank. The encounters included intercourse in a bank vault and in a storage area in the bank basement. Vinson also testified that Taylor often actually “assaulted or raped” her. She contended that she was forced to submit to Taylor or jeopardize her employment. Taylor, for his part, denied the allegations. He testified that he had never had sex with Vinson. On the contrary, he alleged that Vinson had made advances toward him and that he had C a se 11.4 Consenting to sexual harassment 43075_ch11_ptg01_hr_390-424.indd 420 8/13/12 1:35 PM
  • 3. ch apter eleven JOB DiSCRimiN atiON 421 declined them. He contended that Vinson had brought the charges against him to “get even” because of a work-related dispute. In its ruling on the case, the court held that if Vinson and Taylor had engaged in a sexual relationship, that relationship was voluntary on the part of Vinson and was not employment related. The court also held that Capital City Federal Savings and Loan did not have “notice” of the alleged harassment and was therefore not liable. Although Taylor was Vinson’s super- visor, the court reasoned that notice to him was not notice to the bank. Vinson appealed the case, and the Court of Appeals held that the district court had erred in three ways. First, the dis- trict court had overlooked the fact that there are two possi- ble kinds of sexual harassment. Writing for the majority, Chief Judge Spottswood Robinson distinguished cases in which the victim’s continued employment or promotion is conditioned on giving in to sexual demands and those cases in which the victim must tolerate a “substantially discrimi- natory work environment.” The lower court had failed to consider whether Vinson’s case involved harassment of the second kind. Second, the higher court also overruled the district court’s finding that because Vinson voluntarily engaged in a sexual relationship with Taylor, she was not a victim of sexual harassment. Voluntariness on Vinson’s part had “no bearing,” the judge wrote, on “whether Taylor made Vinson’s toleration of sexual harassment a condition of
  • 4. her employment.” Third, the Court of Appeals held that any discriminatory activity by a supervisor is attributable to the employer, regardless of whether the employer had specific notice. In his dissent to the decision by the Court of Appeals, Judge Robert Bork rejected the majority’s claim that “voluntariness” in the movie North Country, Charlize theron plays a character who has no choice but to take on a miner’s job in order to survive as the mother of two. Confronted with unrelenting verbal and physical abuse at the hands of her male coworkers, she fights back and ultimately wins a sexual harassment lawsuit. W ar ne r B ro th er s/ co ur te sy E ve
  • 5. re tt Co lle ct io n 43075_ch11_ptg01_hr_390-424.indd 421 8/13/12 1:35 PM 422 pa rt FOUr tHE ORG aNiZ atiON aND tHE PEOPLE iN it did not automatically rule out harassment. He argued that this position would have the result of depriving the accused per- son of any defense, because he could no longer establish that the supposed victim was really “a willing participant.” Judge Bork contended further that an employer should not be held vicariously liable for a supervisor’s acts that it didn’t know about. Eventually the case arrived at the U.S. Supreme Court, which upheld the majority verdict of the Court of Appeals, stat- ing that: [T]he fact that sex-related conduct was “voluntary,” in the sense that the complainant was not forced to participate against her will, is not a defense to a sexual harassment suit brought under Title VII. The gravamen of any sexual harassment claim is that the alleged sexual advances were “unwelcome.”. . . The correct inquiry is whether respondent by her
  • 6. conduct indicated that the alleged sexual advances were unwelcome, not whether her actual participa- tion in sexual intercourse was voluntary. The Court, however, rejected the Court of Appeals’s position that employers are strictly liable for the acts of their supervisors, regardless of the particular circumstances.72 D i s C u s s i o n Q u e s t i o n s 1. According to her own testimony, Vinson acquiesced to Taylor’s sexual demands. In this sense her behavior was “voluntary.” Does the voluntariness of her behavior mean that she had “consented” to Taylor’s advances? Does it mean that they were “welcome”? Do you agree that Vinson’s acquiescence shows there was no sexual harassment? Which court was right about this? Defend your position. 2. In your opinion, under what circumstances would acquiescence be a defense to charges of sexual harassment? When would it not be a defense? Can you formulate a general rule for deciding such cases? 3. Assuming the truth of Vinson’s version of the case, do you think her employer, Capital City Federal Savings and Loan, should be held liable for sexual harassment it was not aware of? Should the employer have been aware of it? Does the fact that Taylor was a supervisor make a difference? In general, when should an employer be liable for harassment? 4. What steps do you think Vinson should have taken when
  • 7. Taylor first pressed her for sex? Should she be blamed for having given in to him? Assuming that there was sexual harassment despite her acquiescence, does her going along with Taylor make her partly responsible or mitigate Taylor’s wrongdoing? 5. In court, Vinson’s allegations were countered by Taylor’s version of the facts. Will there always be a “your word against mine” problem in sexual harass- ment cases? What could Vinson have done to strengthen her case? 43075_ch11_ptg01_hr_390-424.indd 422 8/13/12 1:35 PM Business Ethics Week Discussions Week 10 "Consenting to Sexual Harassment" Please respond to the following: · Read Case 11.4: Consenting to Sexual Harassment, located here or on page 420 in your textbook then respond to the following questions. According to her own testimony, Vinson acquiesced to Taylor’s sexual demands. In this sense her behavior was “voluntary.” Does the voluntariness of her behavior mean she had “consented” to Taylor’s advances? Does it mean they were “welcome”? Do you agree that Vinson’s acquiescence shows there was no sexual harassment? Defend your position. I attach the case study in a separate document. Part 2 Beauty Lies in the Eye of the Beholder, but Ugly is Ugly Respond to the following questions. They count as part of your participation post for the week. 1. Do you believe people are physically attractive or physically ugly? Explain.
  • 8. 2. Are there jobs that should require physical attractiveness as a criterion for employment? Explain. 3. Do you think ugliness should become a protected class? Explain. Part 3 Gender pay gap isn't a problem and opportunities are available to all, say men. But women take a different view Please click on the link below and answer the question. Note that this qualfies as part of your discussion and extra credit posts. http://www.dailymail.co.uk/money/smallbusiness/article- 2984328/Gender-pay-gap-isn-t-problem-say-men-women- different-view.html 1. Do you agree with the views held my men per the survey results? 2. Beyond education, what can we do to ensure gender pay equity? Bottom of Form Discussion Week 11 Sow a Seed As we get ready to part company, I want to sow a seed into your lives by way of sharing a poem that means a lot to me and hope you find it equally useful. https://youtu.be/6X8YnCq6UME Feel free to sow a seed by way of poems, songs, quotes, and other artistic expressions. Shalom! Hum112 Week 9 "Government and the Arts; Abstract Expressionism and Music"
  • 9. Please respond to the following, using sources under the Explore heading as the basis of your response: · Examine the U.S. Government's support during the Great Depression for programs, such as the Federal Arts Project, the Federal Writers' Project, and other such efforts. Determine whether or not such projects were good government investments during those hard times, and provide two (2) examples that support your viewpoint. Determine in what ways the U.S. government currently tries to support the arts.State whether you agree or disagree with the perception of Abstract Expressionism as exemplifying individualism and freedom. Explain the reasons for your views. Compare and contrast one (1) example of Abstract Expressionist visual art to John Cage’s musical compositions. After reviewing the pages and Websites below, explain how an abstract expressionist artist might respond to the assertion "my kid could paint that". Explain your position on that assertion. Explore: Government and the Arts · Chapter 37 (pp. 1228-1231), Federal support for the arts · Government helping the arts in hard times at http://www.smithsonianmag.com/arts-culture/1934-Picturing- Hard- Times.html and http://www.pbs.org/speak/seatosea/powerprose/ wpa/ · Week 10 "Twentieth Century African-American Artists; Postmodern Architecture" Please respond to the following, using sources under the Explore heading as the basis of your response: · Choose two (2) of the following late 20th century African- American artists, and compare and contrast their art: Bearden, Lawrence, Basquiat, or Colescott. Describe specific elements of the works from the chosen artists that represent the multiplicity of the African-American experience. Identify one (1) of these works (or some other by an African American artist) that you
  • 10. would like in your workplace, and explain why. Choose one (1) example of architecture that you believe best exemplifies the characteristic post-modern style. Provide a rationale for your selection, and describe two (2) of the features of post-modern style that you find intriguing. Explore: African American Artists of the Twentieth Century · Chapter 35 (p. 1167) and Chapter 36 (p. 1180) on Jacob Lawrence · Chapter 39 (pp. 1285-1286) on Romare Bearden · Chapter 40 (pp. 1326-1327) on Jean-Michel Basquiat · Jacob Lawrence, New York Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) at http://www.moma.org/collection/artist.php?artist_id=3418 · Basquiat and Robert Colescott, Washington DC's Corcoran Museum at http://www2.corcoran.org/30americans/artists/ · Romare Bearden video, San Francisco's Museum of Modern Art at http://www.sfmoma.org/explore/multimedia/videos/205 Postmodern Architecture · Chapter 40 (pp. 1312-1321) for examples of post-modern architecture · Post-modern buildings of renown: http://www.greatbuildings.com/types/styles/post_moder n.html Week 11 "Reflection" Respond to the following: · Identify three (3) ideas that you learned in the course that surprised, confused, or intrigued you, and explain the reasons why. Write three to four (3-4) sentences about your cultural event experience for Assignment 3. HH