Online Online harassment may direct multiple repeating obscenities, unwanted behaviour or unpleasant comments at specific people. It can include sharing information about a person they did not want shared, posting unpleasant comments, pictures or videos; and online
impersonation. Some online harassment may focus on the victims characteristics such as age, sex, race, religion, gender, nationality, disability, or sexual orientation. This is discrimination.
Trolling has been defined as a collective form of harassment perceived as having malicious intent to provoke another user. In recent years, many politicians have experienced trolling and it has been identified as having a significant impact on political discourse. Online harassment can occur on social media, in chat rooms, within gaming environments or by sending unpleasant and unwanted emails to people who do not want to receive these communications and are offended by them. Online harassment may involve using photos of the victim and their families, altering photos in offensive ways, and then posting them on social media with the aim of causing emotional distress (see
cyberbullying,
cyberstalking,
hate crime,
online predator,
Online Gender-Based Violence, and
stalking).
Herd mentality and cyberbullying are common on social media platforms. The "social media mob" that formed may evolve to "bullying anyone who didn't align with their beliefs or conclusions".
Police Unfair treatment conducted by law officials, including but not limited to
excessive force,
profiling,
threats and
coercion, that may be related to characteristics such as disability, race, ethnicity, religious beliefs, gender/sexual, age, or other forms of
discrimination. Such behaviour would violate dignity or create a hostile, degrading, humiliating or offensive environment. Police harassment is unlawful and may be a violation of a person's human rights.
Power Power harassment is harassment or unwelcome attention of a political nature, often occurring in the environment of a workplace including hospitals, schools and universities. It includes a range of behavior from mild irritation and annoyances to serious
abuses which can even involve forced activity beyond the boundaries of the job description. Power harassment is considered a form of illegal
discrimination and is a form of political and
psychological abuse, and
bullying.
Psychological This is humiliating, intimidating or abusive behavior which is often difficult to detect, leaving no evidence other than victim reports or complaints. This characteristically lowers a person's self-esteem or causes one to have overwhelming torment. This can take the form of verbal comments, engineered episodes of intimidation, aggressive actions or repeated gestures. Falling into this category is workplace harassment by individuals or groups
mobbing.
Landlord Landlord harassment is the willing creation of conditions that are uncomfortable for one or more
tenants in order to induce willing abandonment of a
rental contract. Such a strategy is often sought because it avoids costly legal
expenses and potential problems with
eviction. This kind of activity is common in regions where
rent control laws exist, but which do not allow the direct extension of rent-controlled prices from one tenancy to the subsequent tenancy, thus allowing landlords to set higher prices. Landlord harassment carries specific legal penalties in some
jurisdictions, but enforcement can be difficult in some circumstances. However, when a
crime is committed in the process and motives similar to those described above are subsequently proven in court, then those motives may be considered an
aggravating factor in many jurisdictions, thus subjecting the offender(s) to a stiffer
sentence. Examples of behaviour that is landlord harassment and is a criminal offence in some jurisdictions includes opening or withholding post, entering a persons home without permission, removing or interfering with belongings and violent and intimidating language or behaviour. Landlords should also be aware that in some jurisdictions, the legal responsibilities they have in regards to harassment, extend to ensuring their tenants are not harassing other people.
Disability Disability harassment occurs when a person finds the behaviour towards them offensive, frightening, degrading, humiliating or distressing and the motivation for this is a person's disability. In many jurisdictions, it is unlawful. It is a type of discrimination. Data in the UK and Europe suggests it is a common type of harassment, that also occurs in the workplace.
Racial Racial harassment involves a series of incidents that are targeted at a person, due to their race, colour, nationality or ethnicity. The harassment may include words, intimidation, causing offence and harm and actions that are specifically designed to make the person feel degraded. Examples of such behaviour includes derogatory name calling, verbal threats, insults, racist jokes and displaying racially offensive material. This is discrimination and is unlawful in many jurisdictions.
Religious Religious persecution is verbal, psychological or physical harassment against targets because they choose to practice a specific religion.
Religious abuse is abuse due to religious settings. Religious harassment can include
coercion into
forced conversion.
Sexual Sexual harassment is an offensive or humiliating behavior that is related to a person's sex. It can be a subtle or overt sexual nature of a person (sexual annoyance, e.g. flirting, expression of sexuality, etc.) that results in wrong communication or miscommunication, implied sexual conditions of a job (sexual coercion, etc.). It includes unwanted and unwelcome words, facial expressions, sexual attention, deeds, actions, symbols, or behaviors of a sexual nature that make the target feel uncomfortable. This can involve visual or suggestive looks or comments, staring at a person's body, or the showing of inappropriate photos. It can happen anywhere, but is most common in the
workplace,
schools, and the
military. Even if certain civility codes were relevant in the past, the changing cultural norms calls for policies to avoid intentional fallacies between sexes and among same sexes. Women are substantially more likely to be affected than men.
Workplace Workplace harassment is the offensive, belittling or threatening behavior directed at an individual worker or a group of workers. Workplace harassment can be verbal, physical, sexual, racial, or bullying. Recently, matters of
workplace harassment have gained interest among practitioners and researchers as it is becoming one of the most sensitive areas of effective workplace management. In some East Asian countries, it has attracted substantial attention from researchers and governments since the 1980s, because aggressive behaviors have become a significant source of work stress, as reported by employees. Under
occupational health and safety laws around the world, workplace harassment and
workplace bullying are identified as being core psychosocial hazards.
Electronic Electronic harassment is the unproven belief of the use of
electromagnetic waves to harass a victim. Psychologists have identified evidence of
auditory hallucinations,
delusional disorders, or other
mental disorders in online communities supporting those who claim to be targeted. ==Laws==