It’s Not Just Mike Pence. Americans Are Wary of Being Alone With the Opposite Sex. – New York Times

Attitudes reflect a work world shadowed by sexual harassment. In recent news about Uber and Fox News, women see cautionary tales about being alone with men.

In interviews, people described a cultural divide. Some said their social lives and careers depended on such solo meetings. Others described caution around people of the opposite sex, and some depicted the workplace as a fraught atmosphere in which they feared harassment, or being accused of it.

When a man and a woman are left alone, outside parties can insinuate about whats really going on, said Christopher Mauldin, a construction worker in Rialto, Calif. Sometimes false accusations create irreversible damages to reputations.

He said he avoids any solo interactions with women, including dining or driving, as does his girlfriend with other men. When he needs to meet with women at work or his church, he makes sure doors are left open and another person is present. Others described similar tactics, including using conference rooms with glass walls and avoiding alcohol with colleagues. Temptation is always a factor, said Mr. Mauldin, 29.

One reason women stall professionally, research shows, is that people have a tendency to hire, promote and mentor people like themselves. When men avoid solo interactions with women a catch-up lunch or late night finishing a project it puts women at a disadvantage.

If I couldnt meet with my boss one on one, I dont get that face time to show what I can do to get that next promotion, said Shannon Healy, 31, a property manager in Houghton, Mich.

Republican, more religious and less educated men were somewhat more likely to say such meetings were inappropriate.

Any rule about avoiding meetings that applied only to one sex, even if unspoken, would most likely be illegal, said Peter Rahbar, founder of the Rahbar Group for employment law. Such behavior is often cited in gender discrimination lawsuits, he said.

Working with The Times, Morning Consult, a polling, media and technology company, surveyed 5,300 registered voters in May. The survey did not ask about marital status or sexual orientation.

Over all, people thought dinner or drinks with a member of the opposite sex other than a spouse was the most inappropriate, with more people disapproving than approving. Lunch and car rides were less objectionable, but more than a third of people said they were inappropriate. Fewer than two-thirds of respondents said a work meeting alone with a member of the opposite sex was appropriate; 16 percent of women and 18 percent of men with postgraduate degrees said it was inappropriate.

In general, women were slightly more likely to say one-on-one interactions were inappropriate. So were Republicans, people who lived in rural areas, people who lived in the South or Midwest, people with less than a college education and people who were very religious, particularly evangelical Christians.

Younger women and those who say religion is important in their lives are more likely to say that activities done alone with men are inappropriate.

Yet the gender caution reaches across divides and into many workplaces.

Kathleen Raven, a science writer at Yale, considers herself to be progressive in many ways. But she does not have closed-door or out-of-office meetings alone with men, because she was previously sexually harassed. She also tries to avoid being too friendly, to ensure she doesnt give the wrong impression.

Women are taught to believe that we are equals while were growing up, and thats not a good message, said Ms. Raven, 34. We have to make a lot of efforts to protect ourselves.

Shelby Wilt, 22, of Gilbert, Ariz., said she and her boyfriend socialize alone with friends of the opposite sex. At work, though, it depends on the man. At the restaurant where she used to work, she would ask for conversations with certain men to take place in the kitchen, with others around. Its very much an instinctual call, she said.

If they were above 65, Republican or very religious, respondents were slightly more likely to say people should take extra precaution around members of the opposite sex at work. They were less likely if they were young, students, not religious or registered as an independent.

Organizations are so concerned with their legal liabilities, but nobodys really focused on how to reduce harassment and at the same time teach men and women to have working relationships with the opposite sex, said Kim Elsesser, author of Sex and the Office: Women, Men and the Sex Partition Thats Dividing the Workplace.

People who follow the practice in their social lives described separate spheres after couplehood. They said they wanted to safeguard against impropriety or the appearance of it and to respect marriage and, in some cases, Christian values. That often meant limiting opposite-sex adult friendships to their friends spouses.

Cindy McCafferty, 60 and Catholic, is single, but said she would do so in a future relationship. The Sixth Commandment is you dont commit adultery, and you dont want to do anything that would jeopardize that, said Ms. McCafferty, a mental health caregiver in Appleton, Wis.

Dennis Hollinger, president of the Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary and an expert on sex and Christian ethics, said the practice goes beyond what the Bible requires.

All of us know our ethical and spiritual vulnerabilities, and the idea of establishing protocols to live out those commitments can be a good thing, he said. The negative side is this particular practice really can appear to treat women in really dehumanizing ways, almost as if they were a temptress.

Some people said the behavior simply did not reflect the world they live in. For Hannah Stackawitz, 30, a health care consultant in Langhorne, Pa., life without solo meetings with men is unimaginable. I do it every day, honestly, she said, as does her husband.

Theres no way that women or men can become their full and best selves by closing themselves off.

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A version of this article appears in print on July 2, 2017, on Page A1 of the New York edition with the headline: When Job Puts Sexes Together, Workers Cringe.

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It's Not Just Mike Pence. Americans Are Wary of Being Alone With the Opposite Sex. - New York Times

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