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Domestic Violence Should
Be a Corporate Concern
January 20, 2005 - (Financial Gazette - Harare)
Zimbabwe recently joined the rest of the world in observing 16 Days
of Activism Against Gender Violence. Plans are also at an advanced
stage for the enactment of a Domestic Violence
Act by our own legislature.
Traditionally, domestic violence has been largely viewed as a private
matter requiring at most the attention of the state and social welfare
or non-governmental organisations.
The corporate world has been rather indifferent to the issue of
domestic violence. In Zimbabwe, very few companies have taken a
public stance on the matter, as can be evidenced by the non-existence
of workplace policies specifically aimed at dealing with domestic
violence.
Elsewhere, in a bid to save lives, stave off lawsuits and maintain
productivity, some employers have decided that domestic violence
should be a corporate concern. Several have created awareness and
education programmes for managers and employees.
The US Office of Criminal Justice calculates that three to four
million women are battered each year. Further, according to the
US Surgeon-General's Office, domestic violence is the most widespread
cause of injury for women between the ages 15 and 44 - surpassing
car accidents, muggings and rapes combined.
Though women in traditional relationships are the most common victims
of domestic violence, this social disease strikes down others as
well. Men are abused by female partners, parents beat children,
youngsters abuse elders and even roommates can strike each other
in anger.
The broken bones and scarred psyches of domestic violence don't
remain at home.
Domestic violence takes a shocking toll in the workplace: it leads
to absenteeism, increased health care costs, higher turnover and
lower productivity at work.
It occasionally brings violence right into the workplace. A 2002
survey of 100 senior executives at Fortune 1000 companies says that
five out of 10 corporate leaders believe that domestic violence
has harmful effects on productivity, physical safety, attendance
and employee turnover. In fact, the Family Violence Prevention Fund
(a US-based organisation) reports that 7.9 million work days are
lost each year because of domestic violence. This adds up to more
than US$700 million in lost productivity annually. Beyond that,
injuries related to domestic violence lead to health care expenses
of about US$4.1 billion, most of which is paid by employers.
If you have employees who are stressed because when they go home
they will be beaten up, this affects your bottom line. It is absurd
to think otherwise.
It is precisely for this reason that this instalment argues that
domestic violence is every employer's business.
Employers have a corporate responsibility to maintain a safe environment
at work, if not out of concern for their employees, then out of
a legal responsibility to them. Many experts think the workplace
can be an appropriate place to stop domestic violence in its tracks,
with human resources (HR) playing a prime moving function.
HR does this through an array of focused interventions. For them
to be effective in this role, HR managers must be able to read the
early warning signals of domestic violence abuse. Some of the warning
signals are:
Repeated physical injuries - an abused person may show up with a
broken finger one month and a bruised arm the next, both of which
she explains away.
Isolation - a person who is being abused might be quiet and refuse
to make acquaintances or friends at work. She
may always eat lunch alone and will rarely talk unless someone speaks
to her first.
Emotional distress - An abused person may be found crying at work
or be very anxious.
Despondence or depression - everyone may feel this way once in a
while, but where there's a pattern there's probably a problem.
Distraction - an abused person's quality of work will vacillate
for unexplained reasons. She may have a few weeks when everything
is fine, and then the quality of her work may suddenly diminish
for no apparent reason.
Reaction to phone calls - if she is being beaten, she may also be
receiving a lot of harassing phone calls or faxes. She becomes physically
upset with each call.
Absenteeism - domestic violence leads to frequent medical problems
and fears about leaving children home alone with the abuser.
Once HR has a clearer understanding of these early warnings, it
should then be in a stronger position to come up with credible strategies
as recommended in the remainder of this instalment.
Companies need to make a decision about how they will respond to
domestic violence. Employers should at least consider domestic violence
as part of their general workplace violence policies. They must
have a policy and plan in place to prevent and respond to workplace
violence.
Beyond that, employers can be involved in combating domestic violence
in other ways. One such way is to build awareness by educating the
workforce about domestic violence by, for example, distributing
fliers about the abuse and participating in the 16 Days of Activism
Against Gender Violence.
Most importantly, employers should have their policies and procedures
in place before they begin awareness activities.
Secondly, employers should develop a domestic violence prevention
programme premised on unquestionable corporate commitment that assures
workers, such as :"We will provide a workplace free of threats,
fear and violence; and we will respond to threats of potential violence".
When developing the prevention programme, managers should be informed
that chronic absenteeism or tardiness could indicate a domestic
violence problem, and that 30 percent of women are abused for the
first time when they are pregnant. Also, there should be several
methods for people to seek assistance to accommodate workers' varying
comfort levels.
Finally, employers need to commit themselves to creating individual
workplace safety plans that focus on protecting employees from batterers,
helping them find shelter, giving affected employees time off for
court appearances and providing financial assistance to enable affected
employees to move away.
From: http://allafrica.com/stories/200501200340.html
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