
From the Publisher:
This comprehensive text stands alone in
addressing sexual harassment from a forensic psychiatric perspective.
Sexual Harassment: Psychiatric Assessment in Employment Litigation
reviews the law, social science research, clinical experience, and
principles of forensic evaluation relevant to the highly adversarial
legal arena of sexual harassment litigation. This illuminating guide
covers every aspect of psychiatric assessment in sexual harassment
litigation: definition/legal history, bias/gender,
credibility/malingering, "welcomeness," "reasonableness," causation, and
emotional injury and damages. In an area where few training or
educational opportunities exist, Dr. Gold presents a structured
framework for these evaluations, including case examples that bring this
framework to life.
No single response or specific psychiatric problem is
associated with sexual harassment. Not all experiences of sexual
harassment even constitute illegal employment discrimination. The term
itself covers a wide range of behaviors, from annoying to traumatic.
Likewise, the responses to such events, real or perceived, are broadly
diverse. Further, the difficulties and ambiguities that arise at the
interface of psychiatry, the legal system, and the social issues raised
by sexual harassment make the application of psychiatric knowledge and
expertise in such cases uniquely challenging.
This work provides invaluable assistance in helping mental health
experts meet these challenges while also serving the legal system's goal
of adjudicating disputes in the interest of serving justice. It
emphasizes that experts should:
- Base their evaluations and testimony on a thorough evaluation of
the issues in each case.
- Acquire the intellectual tools needed, including familiarity with
gender issues, the effects of stress and trauma, the scope and effects
of sexual harassment, and an awareness of the potential biases that
may influence opinions.
- Understand the scientific basis of their testimony.
As the definitive work on the forensic
psychiatric aspects of sexual harassment, this work explores and bridges
the interface between the law, social science, psychiatry, and
employment issues. This classic volume will provide invaluable
assistance to psychiatrists and psychologists in formulating credible,
well-reasoned opinions in an evolving and controversial area of the law.
Other mental health professionals and educators, as well as members of
the legal and human resources community, will also find that this
in-depth study increases their understanding and appreciation of the
complexities and challenges of psychiatric evaluations in sexual
harassment litigation.
Table of Contents:
Chapter 1. The
Psychiatric Expert in Sexual Harassment Litigation
Chapter 2. Sexual
Harassment: Definition, Legal History, and Legal Process
Chapter 3. Bias in
the Assessment of Sexual Harassment Claims
Chapter 4. Gender,
the Workplace, and Sexual Harassment
Chapter 5. Sexual
Harassment Research, Science, and Daubert
Chapter
6. Special Issues in and Guidelines for the
Psychiatric Evaluation and Interview
Chapter
7. Credibility Assessments and Malingering in
Sexual Harassment Litigation
Chapter
8. The Assessment of "Welcomeness"
Chapter
9. The Reasonable Person and Sexual Harassment
Chapter
10. Psychiatric Diagnosis and the Assessment of Causation
Chapter
11. Emotional Injury and the Assessment of Damages
Chapter
12. A Framework for Psychiatric Evaluation in Sexual
Harassment Litigation
References
Legal
Case Index
Subject Index
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