Legal Literacy - In today's social reality, we still witness how perspectives on the positions of women and men are often trapped in outdated paradigms, where women are often placed in an unbalanced situation. This is not just a theory, but a reflection in real actions, one of which is the deeply rooted practice of sexual harassment.

Although not all victims are women, data recorded in a number of studies reveals that the majority of sexual harassment victims are women. This can happen anywhere, such as shopping centers, schools, workplaces, or on public transportation, by perpetrators who are not even recognized by the victim.

However, this phenomenon is not limited to public spaces, because even in private spaces, sexual harassment often occurs unexpectedly by the victim. As a result, the perpetrator's vile actions only leave a few traces that can be used as evidence by the victim. This is what then becomes one of the major challenges in the process of uncovering a number of sexual harassment cases.

Difficult evidence, especially in cases that occur without witnesses, causes many cases to go unreported. Not infrequently, similar cases are not reported or even stall along the way, because the legal system has difficulty obtaining sufficient evidence to follow up on the case.

Therefore, we must question again, whether the available system has truly sided with the justice of the victims, or is it actually perpetuating the actions of the perpetrators because of the weakness of our law enforcement today?