Harassment survey suggests judges are among the worst offenders

March 24, 2018

Nearly nine in ten New Zealand criminal lawyers say they've seen or been the victim of harassment or bullying at work, according to a survey.

And more than a quarter who witnessed problems reported seeing sexual harassment, the Criminal Bar Association survey of 300 anonymous lawyers found.

The release of the results comes after revelations about complaints of sexual misconduct against lawyers at top law firm Russell McVeagh and subsequent protests.

About 89 per cent of those taking the survey said they had "personally experienced or witnessed" harassment or bullying, with 28 per cent of those having seen unwelcomed sexual attention and 27 per cent describing "threats".

More than half said they had seen shouting, and 46 per cent witnessed harassment based on gender.

But the survey also found fewer than 17 per cent of the participants made an official compliant, with only about seven per cent saying they thought it had fixed the problem.

Former Lawyer Olivia Wensley on Saturday told Three's the Nation the size of New Zealand's law industry made it hard to openly make complaints.

"The legal profession is small in New Zealand. There are grave implications professionally for speaking out," she said.

Judges in particular were singled out by the survey's respondents.

About 65 per cent of respondents who had seen harassment or bullying said they had witnessed a judge do it, compared to 43 per cent who pointed the finger at colleagues, 33 per cent at opposing consul and 31 per cent at clients.

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