In the last two decades molecular techniques have revealed that polyandry, or multiple mating by females with different males, is common. One explanation is that females engage in convenience polyandry, mating multiply to reduce the costs of sexual harassment. Although the underlying logic of convenience polyandry is clear, and harassment often seems to influence mating outcomes, it has not been subjected to as thorough theoretical or empirical attention as other explanations for polyandry. Here, we reexamine convenience polyandry in the light of a new generation of studies showing previously unconsidered benefits of polyandry. We suggest that true convenience polyandry is likely to be a fleeting phenomenon, but a phenomenon that can profoundly shape mating system evolution due to potential feedback loops between resistance to males and the costs and benefits of mating. The history of polyandry Mating systems are often classified as either monogamous, with a single male paired with a single female, or polygamous, with multiple mates of one or the other sex. Polygamy in turn can be subdivided into polygyny (one male with multiple females) or polyandry (one female with multiple males; see glossary). The near ubiquitous nature of polygyny has never been debated, but polyandry has had a somewhat contradictory history. On the one hand, researchers using insects and other invertebrates as study organisms have often acknowledged the prevalence of