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Executive Summary


Despite significant legislative reforms and heightened regulatory scrutiny, workplace sexual harassment remains systemically underreported in Australia, creating substantial compliance and organisational risk. New research from Flinders University reveals that only one in five employees who experience harassment report it—not due to a lack of policies, but because reporting systems themselves undermine the psychological needs essential for employees to come forward.


For senior leaders and compliance professionals, this presents a critical challenge: your organisation may have policies in place, but if your reporting mechanisms fail to address fundamental psychological barriers, you are exposed to regulatory penalties, reputational damage, increased attrition, and potential legal action under Australia's strengthened workplace harassment framework.


The Compliance Landscape: Australian Regulations in 2025-2026


Federal Requirements

Australian employers now operate under a comprehensive regulatory framework that demands proactive prevention, not merely reactive response:

Fair Work Act 2009 Amendments (Effective March 2023)
  • Explicit prohibition of workplace sexual harassment

  • Positive duty on employers to take reasonable and proportionate measures to prevent harassment

  • Fair Work Ombudsman, unions, and individuals can seek compensation and penalties

  • Employers may face fines up to $93,900 for contraventions of harassment orders

Sex Discrimination Act 1984 - Positive Duty (Effective December 2022)
  • Proactive obligation to eliminate sexual harassment before it occurs

  • Australian Human Rights Commission (AHRC) enforcement powers including formal inquiries

  • AHRC now focusing regulatory attention on retail, hospitality, accommodation, food services, arts, recreation, and healthcare sectors

  • Proposed civil penalties for breaches currently under consideration

Work Health and Safety (Sexual and Gender-based Harassment) Code of Practice 2025 (Approved March 2025)
  • Sexual harassment classified as a psychosocial hazard under WHS legislation

  • Four-step risk management process: identify hazards, assess risks, implement controls, maintain and review

  • Trauma-informed investigation requirements

  • Penalties for WHS non-compliance can exceed $1 million for serious breaches


State-Specific Requirements

Queensland (Effective 1 March 2025)
  • Mandatory written sexual harassment prevention plan required

  • Must identify specific risks based on worker characteristics (age, gender, sexual orientation, disability) and workplace environment

  • Must specify control measures and consultation processes

  • Most stringent requirements of any Australian jurisdiction

Victoria (Expected December 2025)
  • New regulations strengthening psychosocial hazard management

  • WorkSafe Victoria actively recognising sexual harassment as a workplace hazard

  • Dual scrutiny from both AHRC and WHS regulators


The Research: Why Employees Don't Report


Key Findings from Flinders University Studies

Two peer-reviewed studies published in 2025 by Dr Annabelle Neall and colleagues provide critical insights for compliance and HR professionals:


Study 1: "Just Not Worth It: A Framework for the Motivational Dynamics of Reporting Workplace Sexual Harassment"

Published in: Work & Stress (2025)

DOI: 10.1080/02678373.2025.2607500


The research surveyed over 200 Australian workers and identified three fundamental psychological needs that influence reporting decisions:

  • Autonomy – Feeling in control of the process and outcomes

  • Competence – Feeling capable of navigating the reporting system

  • Relatedness – Feeling respected and supported by the organisation

When these needs are undermined—through unclear processes, fear of backlash, or lack of trust—employees conclude that reporting "isn't worth the emotional toll, the risk to their reputation, or the likelihood that nothing would change."


Critical employee concerns identified:

  • Uncertainty whether their experience "counted" as harassment

  • Fear of career damage and being labelled as "troublemakers" or "weak"

  • Doubt that reporting would lead to meaningful action

  • Perception that the process itself would be punishing

  • Lack of reassurance about protection from retaliation


Study 2: "Tracing the Evolution of Workplace Sexual Harassment Reporting and Investigations"

Published in: Aggression and Violent Behavior (2025)

DOI: 10.1016/j.avb.2025.102124


This historical review demonstrates that despite legal reforms since the 1980s, reporting systems remain largely ineffective. The research highlights persistent systemic failures:

  • Fear of retaliation remains the dominant barrier

  • Mistrust in investigation processes is widespread

  • Organisational cultures continue to normalise and perpetuate harassment

  • Mandatory reporting schemes can backfire by eroding survivor autonomy

  • "Paper compliance" does not create cultural change


The Business Case for Transformation


Regulatory Risk

Failure to establish effective reporting mechanisms exposes organisations to:

  • Financial penalties: Up to $93,900 for harassment order contraventions; over $1 million for serious WHS breaches

  • AHRC enforcement action: Formal inquiries, compliance notices, and potential court orders

  • Fair Work Ombudsman investigations: Proactive enforcement powers

  • Dual regulatory scrutiny: Both discrimination law and WHS law violations simultaneously


Practical Steps for Senior Leaders


Immediate Actions


1. Conduct a Systemic Audit

  • Review current reporting channels against the three psychological needs framework

  • Assess whether your system undermines autonomy, competence, or relatedness

  • Identify barriers that prevent employees from coming forward

  • Benchmark against AHRC's seven standards for positive duty compliance

2. Assess Regulatory Compliance

  • Queensland organisations: Ensure written prevention plan is in place (mandatory since 1 March 2025)

  • All jurisdictions: Review alignment with WHS Code of Practice 2025 and Managing Psychosocial Hazards Code 2024

  • Document risk assessments specific to your workforce characteristics and workplace environment

  • Prepare evidence of proactive prevention measures


The Path Forward


The research is unequivocal: paper compliance is not enough. Australian employers face an evolving regulatory landscape where demonstrating genuine prevention efforts is now mandatory, and where ineffective reporting systems constitute both a compliance failure and an organisational liability.


As Dr Neall concluded, "If reporting feels unsafe, ineffective, and isolating, people won't do it. To break that cycle, we need to design systems that restore autonomy, competence, and connection for victims who are already hurting."


For CEOs, Board Directors, HR managers, and compliance professionals, the question is no longer whether to act, but how quickly you can transform your systems to meet both legal requirements and employee needs.


About the Research

This article draws on two peer-reviewed studies from Flinders University's Workplace Wellbeing Lab:

1. Neall, A.M., Keenan, C., Woodyatt, L., Belperio, I., Jones, J., & Takarangi, M.K.T. (2025). "Just Not Worth It: A Framework for the Motivational Dynamics of Reporting Workplace Sexual Harassment." Work & Stress. DOI: 10.1080/02678373.2025.2607500

2. Neall, A.M., Keenan, C., Belperio, I., Woodyatt, L., Jones, J., Marrone, I., & Takarangi, M. (2025). "Tracing the Evolution of Workplace Sexual Harassment Reporting and Investigations." Aggression and Violent Behavior. DOI: 10.1016/j.avb.2025.102124

SafeWork Tech provides technology-enabled solutions for confidential workplace harassment reporting. Learn more at safeworktech.com.


The Solution: Moving Beyond Traditional Reporting Systems


Traditional incident reporting systems ask employees to trust that their complaints will remain confidential—while providing little evidence that this is actually the case. These legacy platforms treat reporting as a compliance checkbox, recording incidents after harm has occurred rather than preventing escalation.


This is why reporting rates remain catastrophically low. Employees don't trust systems that can't guarantee anonymity, and organizations can't identify patterns hidden across disconnected platforms.


Salus represents a fundamental shift: a confidential reporting platform built on guaranteed anonymity that increases reporting rates from 36% to 62%. By unifying incident reporting with intelligent analytics across your existing systems, Salus identifies patterns of harassment before they escalate to formal complaints, psychological injury claims, or regulatory investigations.


How Salus Addresses the Core Barriers to Reporting


1. Guaranteed Anonymity Builds Trust

Salus provides cryptographically secure anonymous reporting that eliminates the fear of reprisal—the primary barrier preventing disclosure. Employees can report harassment knowing their identity is protected, while organizations gain the comprehensive data needed to identify systemic issues.


2. Intelligent Analytics Reveal Hidden Patterns

Traditional systems store incidents in silos. Salus integrates with your existing platforms—HRIS, payroll, performance management, employee surveys—aggregating data into a single intelligent engine that identifies correlations invisible in scattered systems. When the same manager appears in multiple low-level reports, or harassment complaints cluster in one department, Salus alerts you before the pattern becomes a crisis.


3. Automated Triage Accelerates Response

Salus automatically routes reports to the appropriate stakeholders based on severity, type, and your organizational policies—eliminating delays while ensuring consistent handling. This reduces the administrative burden on HR (who spend 40% of their time on transactional tasks) and ensures rapid intervention when needed.


4. Platform Consolidation Reduces Complexity

Instead of adding another disconnected platform to your compliance stack, Salus unifies your existing systems into one intelligent management layer. Organizations managing harassment across separate incident tracking, HR systems, and employee feedback tools gain unified oversight through a single dashboard—reducing duplication and improving visibility.


Conclusion: Compliance Alone Won't Prevent Harm


Australia's strengthened sexual harassment laws and positive duty requirements demand more than policy updates. Organizations must create environments where employees actually reportharassment—and where leadership can identify and address patterns before they escalate.


The evidence is clear: only 1 in 5 employees report harassment under traditional systems. This 80% silence leaves organizations blind to systemic issues, exposes them to regulatory penalties and costly claims, and perpetuates cultures where harassment continues unchecked.


Guaranteed anonymity changes this equation. When employees trust they can report without reprisal, disclosure rates increase to 62%—providing the comprehensive data needed to fulfillyour positive duty, demonstrate due diligence, and protect your workforce.


The question for Australian organizations is no longer whether to improve reporting systems—it's whether to act before the next complaint becomes a $93,900 fine, a six-figure legal settlement, or a workplace culture crisis that destroys your employer brand.

 



Salus is Australia's first predictive intelligence platform for workplace psychosocial health. By unifying confidential incident reporting with intelligent analytics across your existing systems, Salus helps organizations detect harassment early, build genuine reporting culture, and reduce psychosocial risk—while consolidating scattered compliance platforms into one unified system.


Book a free system audit and see Salus in action. Discover how Salus can unify your existing platforms, reduce administrative burden, and help you identify psychosocial risks before they become costly claims.