Law Studentā€™s Article on Countering the ā€œEqual Opportunity Harasserā€ Defense Wins Multiple Writing Awards

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By Tad Vezner
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A µē³µĪŽĀė-Kent College of Law student has won a pair of notable writing awards for her paper on how a recent United States Supreme Court case could weaken a peculiar sexual harassment defense made by ā€œequal opportunity harassers.ā€

Katherine Hanson (LAW 3rd Year) was named as the 2021 winner of the and placed second in the Louis Jackson Memorial National Student Writing Competition for her paper, entitled ā€œConduct, Causation, and Comparators: Revisiting the Defense of the Equal Opportunity Harasser After Bostock.ā€

ā€œBostockā€ refers to a 2020 Supreme Court Case Bostock v. Clayton County, Georgia, which determined that Title VII protects individuals against discrimination based on gender identity or sexual orientation discrimination. Title VII of the 1964 Civil Rights Act is a federal law protecting employees against discrimination based on a number of factors, including ā€œsex.ā€ The Bostock case covered three separate appellate cases alleging various types of sex discrimination.

Hanson says she chose the topic while doing an externship with the United States Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) last fall. While reviewing model jury instructions for the U.S. Federal Seventh and Eighth Circuits, she noticed a footnote identifying a difference between circuits over the ā€œequal opportunity sexual harasser,ā€ which piqued her interest.

An equal opportunity sexual harasser describes an employer who, in effect, harasses both men and women at work. The term has led to a defense that Hanson saw as frustrating.

ā€œThe idea is that if you treat both sexes badly, youā€™re not discriminating,ā€ she says. So plaintiffs lose their claim under Title VII.

The circuit courts remain split on how they analyze the defenseā€”partly because, Hanson argues, ā€œThere is actually very little legislative history when we try to figure out the legal definition of ā€˜sex.ā€™ā€

In sex discrimination claims, courts often use ā€œcomparators,ā€ or examples of a sex difference, to show that an employer treated one group worse than another. Historically, common comparators were of the opposite sex of the plaintiff.  However, when analyzing the equal opportunity sexual harasser, some courts, like Illinoisā€™s Seventh Circuit, have determined that Title VII does not apply when both a male and female allege sexual harassment by the same supervisor. Technically, the court reasoned, the supervisor is not discriminating on the basis of ā€œsex.ā€ 

But Hanson saw that simple binary difference in comparators as lacking. What if a supervisor discriminated against both homosexual women and heterosexual men, for example?

Enter Bostock. ā€œBostock expands the definition of discrimination to also include gender identity and orientation. It expands the how we use ā€˜sex,ā€™ in analysis,ā€ Hanson says. 

Hanson argues that this standard could be used to broaden plaintiffsā€™ arguments against ā€œequal opportunity harassers.ā€

ā€œNow you have a ton of combinations, a ton of ways you can define your plaintiff in contrast to comparators,ā€ Hanson says. ā€œMy argument is that because of Title VIIā€™s broader applicability, we can pull these disparate treatment definitions from Bostock into cases involving sexual harassment to start to close this loophole of the ā€˜equal opportunity harasser.ā€™ā€ Hanson also notes that the language of Bostock seems to directly address the ā€œequal opportunity harasserā€ as well. 

Professor Elizabeth De Armond, who, as µē³µĪŽĀė-Kentā€™s legal writing director, organized the Strubbe competitionā€™s blind-judging panel, says, ā€œHansonā€™s article thoroughly analyzes both Bostock and the inconsistent court decisions, and shows how the Supreme Courtā€™s reasoning in Bostock can rationally and justly resolve those inconsistencies.ā€

Michael Oswalt, interim director of the Institute for Law and the Workplace, says Hansonā€™s article ā€œshows how one of the most important advances in workplace legal justice can, and should, reverberate across other areas of employment law for years to come. Her elegant writing and incisive analysis make it a joy to read.ā€

Before coming to µē³µĪŽĀė-Kent, Hanson owned a hair salon. From the salon chair, women would confide in her, talking about the discrimination theyā€™d experienced on their jobs as women. As a working single mother, she could relate; she started at µē³µĪŽĀė-Kent intending to focus on labor and employment law.

ā€œListening to their stories wasnā€™t enough anymore,ā€ Hanson says. ā€œI felt like I could do more than I was doing.ā€

Hanson is the current editor-in-chief of the µē³µĪŽĀė-Kent Law Review, and has completed externships with U.S. District Court Judge John Robert Blakey, the EEOC, and µē³µĪŽĀė-Kentā€™s . She was also awarded a 2021 Justice John Paul Stevens Public Interest Fellowship to work for the Illinois Human Rights Commission.

The Strubbe Prize is awarded annually for the best piece of legal writing in labor and employment law by a µē³µĪŽĀė-Kent student. Strubbe graduated with honors from µē³µĪŽĀė-Kent in 1981 and worked in private practice before returning to the college in 1994 to teach and direct the Legal Research and Writing Program. Following Strubbeā€™s retirement in 2017, the µē³µĪŽĀė Federation of Labor, faculty, and alumni joined together to establish the $5,000 prize.

The Louis Jackson Memorial National Student Writing Competition recognizes the best legal writing in the field of labor and employment law among current law students. The five judges are preeminent legal scholars at schools across the country, and entries undergo doubly anonymous review. The contest is underwritten by Jackson Lewis P.C. and administered by the Institute for Law and the Workplace. The second-place prize is a $1,000 scholarship.

Photo: Katherine Hanson (LAW 2nd Year)