Why it fails

The system was never
designed to work
for any of us.

Workplace harassment law exists in almost every country with a functioning economy. The rights are real. The protections are written down. And yet 99% of people who try to use them leave with nothing. That is not a coincidence. It is what the system was designed to produce.

82%

never formally report

AHRC Time for Respect 2022

51%

report their employment or career was negatively affected

AHRC Time for Respect 2022

1%

get avg. AU$4,000 after years in court

Thornton, Sydney Law Review 2023; ProjectUndeniable composite

The four stages of failure

Most survivors don't stay silent because they lack courage. They stay silent because the process designed to help them has been weaponised against them. Almost everyone goes through all four stages. The system is counting on it.

Stage 1

Doubt

“Is it just me?”

Stage 2

Denial

“He's not really like that.”

Stage 3

Delay

“Due process takes time.”

Stage 4

Disappointment

“After all that, this is what justice looks like?”

Stage 1

Doubt: “Is it just me?”

Mental health deterioration begins within three weeks of sustained harassment, before most people have even named what is happening. The system's first defence is making you question your own perception. Deliberately vague behavioural boundaries, mixed messages about “professional communication”, cultural normalisation of toxic behaviour. Gaslighting is not a side effect of the process. It is the process. By the time you know something is wrong, your evidence is already degrading.

Stage 2

Denial: “He's not really like that.”

When you name it and attempt to report, you hit a wall of institutional resistance. “Are you sure?” “It might be a misunderstanding.” “Have you tried talking to them?” HR departments that report to the same leadership as perpetrators. No anonymous mechanisms. Demands for witnesses. Demands for patterns. 75% of those who report face retaliation within 90 days. The institution does not close ranks accidentally. It closes ranks by design.

Stage 3

Delay: “Due process takes time.”

“Let's talk first.” “We need an internal review.” “We must be fair to all parties.” The average internal investigation runs 75 days. 43% of victims resign before it concludes. While the process runs, harassment continues, emails are deleted, witnesses are coached. The perpetrator, feeling protected, frequently escalates. Due process is not slow because it is thorough. It is slow because delay serves the institution.

Stage 4

Disappointment: “After all that, this is what justice looks like?”

Character assassination is standard defence strategy. For the 1% who reach a legal outcome, justice means money — not change. Average payout: AU$4,000. Legal costs to get there average three times that, paid by the person who was harmed. 95% of settlements include NDAs that protect the perpetrator from their next target. That is not a broken system. That is a system that has been perfected over fifty years. Of those who went through all of it, 51% reported their employment or career was negatively affected. Not the perpetrator's. Theirs.

The cost we're not counting

The legal failure is visible. The economic failure is invisible, and it is orders of magnitude larger. We are facing two simultaneous crises that make harassment-driven attrition not just unethical but existentially expensive.

743M+

people globally have experienced workplace violence or harassment in their working life

ILO-Gallup Global Survey, 2022. 74,364 workers across 121 countries.

200M+

women face sexual harassment at work specifically

ILO / UN Women

1–2%

of harassment complaints in Australia proceed to litigation. The system does not even reach the starting line.

Thornton, Sydney Law Review 2023; International Journal of Discrimination and the Law 2025

51%

of those who reported said their employment, career or work was negatively affected. Not the perpetrator's.

AHRC Time for Respect 2022

What it actually costs, per 1,000 employees over 5 years

$750K

Compliance training that does not change behaviour

Conservative estimate, 1,000 employees over 5 years

$1.68M

Investigation costs: 73 cases at ~$23,000 each

SHRM investigation cost studies

$675K

Settlement costs: 20% of cases reaching resolution

Employment law firm data

$2.03M

Talent replacement: 29 victim departures at $70,000 each

SHRM: replacement costs 50–200% of annual salary

$5.13M total cost to the organisation, per 1,000 employees, over five years.

Every dollar of that is spent managing the consequences of harassment the system failed to prevent. A different system, with timely, individual, certain consequences, reduces that cost by 245% on a conservative ROI calculation, with payback in 6.2 months. The maths of prevention versus consequence has always been obvious. Now it is unavoidable.

Why now

Two things are happening simultaneously that have never been true before. Together they create the only window in which a system like this can be built, and the strongest argument for building it now.

Crisis one

AI is replacing skills faster than people can retrain

The specialists who remain will be rarer, harder to replace, and more expensive to lose. Every harassment-driven exit from a field is now a compounding strategic failure. Not just for the individual, but for the organisations and industries that cannot afford to haemorrhage expertise.

Crisis two

The population is ageing and the talent pool is shrinking

Fewer people entering the workforce. Longer careers needed from those already in it. The economic incentive to retain diverse talent has never been more concrete. Systematically driving women, minorities, and marginalised people out of institutions is no longer just wrong. It is unaffordable.

The ethical case for fixing this has always been obvious. The economic case has just become undeniable. Organisations that continue to absorb harassment as a cost of doing business are betting that talent will always be replaceable. That bet is expiring.

What changes now

We are applying
the logic of traffic fines
to discrimination.

Traffic fines work not because people fear courts, but because the consequences are timely, individual, certain. It follows you. We are applying that same logic to workplace harassment. Making it financially unviable for organisations and for the individuals inside them. Not eventually. By design.

Legal jargonClear human information backed by precedent
Confusion and obfuscationSpecific, verified guidance at every step
Internal hidden processesIndependent third-party accountability
IsolationReal support, coaching, and community
Passive resolution after harmEarly prevention and behaviour change
Organisation-only liabilityIndividual accountability, not just corporate
Punishment as the only outcomeStructured rehabilitation: real consequences at every stage, with a genuine pathway to change

Where you come in

This is not a problem
that gets solved by
a handful of people.

ProjectUndeniable is infrastructure. Infrastructure requires builders, researchers, advocates, legal minds, community organisers, and people who understand what it takes to change the conditions of a system, not just its surface. There is a specific place in this for people who are ready to do something that matters.

One act of purpose at a time. This is how the number changes.