Thank you, Madam Chair. We all appreciate the joys of connectivity these days.
I am speaking to you from Toronto, the traditional territory of the Mississaugas of the Credit, the Chippewa and the Wendat peoples.
I've been engaged on issues of harassment in the CAF for over 40 years, both in uniform and as an academic. I see strengths and weaknesses in the current version of the movie.
We know that Operation Honour has not had the results intended. You want to know why. The reason has been an incomplete understanding of the issues, which has led to incomplete solutions, underpinned by an unwillingness to critically analyze certain aspects of CAF identity and culture.
The first problem is that the issue has been framed as being about sexual misconduct. Yes, there are CAF members who annoy people with overtures, but the key issue is not about sex. If I hit you with a shovel, you wouldn't call it inappropriate gardening. It's about power. It's about sexually and racially coded language to create and police social hierarchies about who is important and who is not.
This death of a thousand cuts damages an individual's self-worth, identity and sense of belonging. You heard last week that military sexual trauma represents a deep moral injury.
The path starts to expand the framing of the problem. It acknowledges that there are cultural factors that can increase incidents of sexual misconduct, but the door is opened only very slightly. The key omission is the continued reluctance to name power and militarized masculinities. This requires a careful and critical analysis of how the military constructs the soldier, sailor, aviator and equally the leader and commander. We need to examine the institutionalized and systemic processes that shape military identity and ask how much of one's identity they have to give up in order to be successful in the CAF.
Most of those leading the CAF have not had to think about this. Left-handed people know they live in a right-handed world, but right-handed people don't. It isn't apparent to us when the world is constructed to fit us. The CAF was a good fit for most seniors. They continue to use terms and narratives that they believe resonate with all but that actually serve to accentuate the dominant identity, and hence increase the social hierarchies and leave some feeling isolated, ignored or not valued for who they are.
As part of analyses, I highlight the 2016 U.S. equal opportunities commission report that identified 12 factors that increase the risk of workplace harassment. The CAF is at the high end for several: significant power disparities, encouraging alcohol consumption, a young workforce, use of coarse language, single-gender dominated culture, and a homogeneous workforce. Only two are reflected in the current path.
Proper considerations of institutional and systemic factors that create the conditions where sexualized language is used to diminish others requires the CAF to shift away from the current focus on the individual. Harassment incidents and lack of reporting are not because people haven't read the definition or don't know how to file a report. Strong social factors, which are intentionally created by the CAF, set these conditions. Addressing these factors means challenging some central tenets of the profession, things that are key to success but can create unhealthy conditions: obedience to authority, normative conformity and group loyalty, the use of power, and the practice of judging others to see if they measure up.
Finally, it has become clear that some seniors have not dealt with sexual misconduct issues effectively. There are examples of some becoming ethically mute and morally numb, but there are also CAF members living in parallel universes. We have men who honestly do not understand how women or diverse folk navigate their careers, their workplaces or their teammates. They assume that all others have the same experiences they do. They haven't critically examined issues of privilege and advantage. They have not seen how others are shunned, marginalized or disadvantaged. They can't see the informal social mechanisms that those subject to harassment use to get the message to the idiot to stop.
Seniors may hear that there was an incident in the mess but learn that the two parties talked it over and settled it all—no harm, no foul. They don't recognize that the most the offended party can hope for is a grudging apology that leaves them still harmed, still looking over their shoulder and still carrying that moral injury.
Some seniors honestly say, “I’ve never seen incidents of sexual misconduct.” That’s because they're wearing cultural glasses with blinders that allow them not to see it. This is a key element of the culture change that the CAF needs to embark on.
My question for this committee is this: What guidance are you going to provide CAF leaders to do so effectively?
I look forward to your questions.