Victimisation
[ch 2: page 15]Fear of victimisation is one of the biggest barriers to people reporting harassment at work, the EHRC has found. The EA 10 protects workers — including former workers — against victimisation.
The EHRC explains that victimisation means treating a worker badly — subjecting them to a detriment — because they have done a protected act. A detriment can be any unfavourable treatment and could include being rejected for promotion or denied training opportunities.
A protected act includes making a complaint about harassment, but a worker can be victimised because it is believed they are going to undertake a protected act. They do not necessarily have to have done it. It also includes helping someone else make a claim, by giving evidence or information, or alleging that someone has breached the EA 10.