2022/09/11

Finding Lightness in the Light - Friends Journal

Finding Lightness in the Light - Friends Journal:

Finding Lightness in the Light
April 1, 2019

By Kerry O'Regan


The Blind Leading the Blind, or The Parable of the Blind, by Pieter Bruegel the Elder, 1568.
 

Iwasn’t always a Quaker. I was born into a big, boisterous Irish Catholic family where there was lots of fun and laughter. In fact, one of my mother’s adages (and she had a whole barrow-load of them) was that “a little nonsense now and then is relished by the wisest men.” Not that we told jokes as such; it’s that we somehow saw the jokes in life. We relished the ridiculous and the absurd, and there was a pervasive sense of playfulness around words, around ideas, and around situations. Anything was fair game. Well, not quite anything. We weren’t allowed to be unkind, and we didn’t joke about S-E-X or anything like that. We were devout too, but somehow we knew that irreverence is not a lack of reverence.

I don’t want to provide a spiritual autobiography, except to say that I moved through Protestantism, where I found a much clearer separation between prayer and playfulness. You could be frivolous and you could be devout, but not at the same time, and there was a kind of conscious earnestness attached to both. Eventually, I ended up among Quakers. Ah, the Quakers.

Perhaps we can be good, do good, and yet have fun at the same time.

We Quakers have a bit of an image problem when it comes to fun and frivolity, and I suspect that goes right back to the beginning. For all his talk of cheerful walking, George Fox was not really much of a cheerful chappy. I think he meant something quite different by the term, but I’m glad he said it. It gives me a certain license somehow. But being a Quaker was a serious business, what with William Penn’s stern warning of No Cross, No Crown, and Thomas Ellwood’s daunting account of his visit to the Peningtons soon after they had become Quakers. He discovered there “so great a change from a free, debonair, and courtly sort of behavior, which we formerly had found in them, to so strict a gravity as they now received us.” No jokes please; we’re Quakers.

There have been some attempts to push back against this. No less a weighty Friend than Thomas Kelly aspired to another way of being Quaker. He had a sense of pervading joy, and speaks of his attempts “to keep one’s inner hilarity and exuberance within bounds.” He goes on to assert that “I’d rather be jolly Saint Francis hymning his canticle to the sun than a dour old sobersides Quaker whose diet would appear to have been spiritual persimmons.” Perhaps we can be good, do good, and yet have fun at the same time. Perhaps weightiness does not have to mean heaviness; simplicity does not have to mean austerity, especially austerity of the soul.

The pleasure of humor transfers to a pleasure in the new and unfamiliar. It encourages us to be adventurous and to take risks: to be creative.

We seem keen at times to prove this about ourselves. We are not humorless. We do have a sense of fun. Our meetinghouse library has a copy of a 1950s publication called Laughter in Quaker Grey. The editor, William Sessions, compiled a selection of anecdotes—real, embellished, apocryphal—which tell funny tales of Quakers, real and imaginary. I think there may have been a later edition as well. More recently, Chuck Fager has produced a similar publication called Quakers Are Funny, and a more strongly argued (well, at least more strongly titled) Quakers Are Hilarious. There are even a couple (that I know) of online groups for Quakers seeking to encourage each other to explore their lighter, more playful selves.

Within such a framework, there are some suitable funny stories I could contribute from my own life. One is a (probably apocryphal) story a dear, old Quaker woman used to tell. A group of youngsters was describing to each other what kind of grace their families would say before meals. When it came to the turn of the little Quaker boy, he explained, “We don’t say grace; we just sit there and smell our food.” (Boom! Boom!)

The second is (as we Aussies would say) a ridgy-didge true story. We run a thrift shop here in Adelaide, and a customer once asked how that could be. How could we have a Quaker-run shop? After all, “Quakers are all dead.”

There is humor in the gospels as well, if we allow ourselves to see it as such.

But is there anything to be gained by being humorous? In evolutionary terms, it seems as though there could be. Having a bit of a scan through the literature of evolutionary psychology, I find the idea that humor may indeed be “evolutionarily adaptive.” The theory goes that a significant element of humor is that there’s always a last-minute twist. Things are brought together that we don’t expect to be together. The final step, the punch line, is a surprise, and somehow that jolt of the unexpected gives us pleasure (the sort of pleasure we call humor). In evolutionary terms, this frees us up to seek other than the usual, predictable answer to situations. The pleasure of humor transfers to a pleasure in the new and unfamiliar. It encourages us to be adventurous and to take risks: to be creative.

And, in fact, there is another whole field of research which shows a connection between humor and creativity. Those who had watched a funny film before attempting a problem-solving task performed better than those who watched an instructional film on mathematics. There are other positive effects of humor which have been identified as well: humor as tension breaker, as connection maker, as sneaky teacher.

Humor has had a place in religion, or at least in some religions. The laughing Buddha comes to mind. Humor seems to be an essential part of at least some versions of Buddhism. I don’t think I’ve seen an interview with the Dalai Lama where he hasn’t been laughing in delight at the essential humor of life. And the koans of Zen involve a freeing of the mind from the rigidly logical and predictable, such that the disciple arrives at an unexpected, but somehow just right, place: through humor to enlightenment.

There is humor in the gospels as well, if we allow ourselves to see it as such. Jesus’s storytelling and preaching are rich with hyperbole and with the juxtaposition of unexpected elements. The stories are full of the element of surprise. Who would think to imagine the blind leading the blind? A laughable idea. Or a camel struggling to enter the eye of a needle (even if it’s not a needle as we know it). Or people with great beams of wood in their eyes complaining about the splinters in others’ eyes. Or meek people inheriting the earth. It’s not belly-laugh stuff, but it’s ludicrous and arresting, and—yes—humorous. We could even argue that this very quality of not-the-expected is an essential component of the gospel message, and there must be something significant in that.

Humor can be used as a means of undermining others in a way that does not respect that of God within them. It can also be used as an easy way out.

I‘ve been speaking as if humor is always a good thing, but of course that is not necessarily so. The same stuff can be used to fashion both swords and plowshares. What presents as humor can be hurtful and destructive—or at least distractive. Humor can be cruel. There is “humor” that belittles, that excludes, that denigrates whole groups through negative stereotyping. Who hasn’t been charged with can’t you take a joke? Humor can be used as a means of undermining others in a way that does not respect that of God within them. It can also be used as an easy way out. It can distract or deflect from a situation that actually needs to be dealt with seriously. Let’s just make a joke and trivialize the issue, so we don’t really need to address it. Humor can indeed do harm. It can be used as a weapon or as an escape, a get-out-of-jail-free card.

But, even with those caveats, I would like to make a case for our embracing humor in our lives as Friends. Let us collect and laugh together at our funny little anecdotes that point out our peculiar idiosyncrasies and help unite us as a people. There’s also a serious side to this funny business. There is value in the particular quality of humor that welcomes the unexpected and unpredictable. This can be freeing, allowing us to cast aside those constrictions and rigidities that can be both limiting and divisive. It can help nurture a climate where we are open to those Aha! moments where we arrive at the unexpected and unpredicted outcome that is as right as it is surprising. Open, if you like, to the promptings of the Spirit which may seek to take us to places our more cautious tight-laced selves could not have imagined. And, besides, what fun we could have along the way.


April 2019

Kerry O'Regan
Kerry O'Regan has been a member of Adelaide Meeting in South Australia for the past 30 years and looks after the books—as in library books—for the meeting. She is a retired teacher who lives right by the sea and so feels that she is on permanent vacation.

Book Review: Testament of Devotion – Evan Welkin

Book Review: Testament of Devotion – Evan Welkin

EVAN WELKIN

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BOOK REVIEW: TESTAMENT OF DEVOTION


Testament of Devotion, a collection of essays and writings by Thomas Kelly, was one of those books I was supposed to be closely reading in college in my Quaker spirituality course. The class took up readings in chronological order from the beginning of Quakerism. I was overwhelmed by the rhetoric of George Fox, underwhelmed by John Woolman’s play-by-play self flagellation and generally lost in Friend’s writings over the last 300 years by the time we got to Thomas Kelly somewhere near the end. Where was the relevance to Quakerism now? Sure, George Fox ran around organizing Quakerism and building the meeting structure still practiced today, but his writing was strident and vindictive. John Woolman seemed like the ultimate self-righteous wet blanket, worrying about every step he took and dwelling for pages and pages on painfully mundane decisions. Haven’t we seen enough of this? Was this really what Quakerism has always been about?

I was hungry for action and heroes at that point in my life. I wanted cure-all solutions, charismatic leadership. Quakerism was fading into obscurity and we needed answers. I wasn’t exactly sure what it meant to be a leader, but I was sure it involved some amount of fast, sensuous Light trippin’: “critical, acid, sharper than a two edged sword” as Thomas Kelly says (I notice now, almost 10 years later). Now that I read Thomas Kelly again I’m struck that despite his earnestness which lost me the first time around, he’s clearly the kind of guy whose bliss was infectious. He may use the word “lo”, but “the sense of Presence!” is woven into every part of what he’s saying. He’s sharing his mystical amazement and salvation. He LOVED the Light, man. Like my brother.

My brother is also a good Quaker, and he occasionally tries to impress on me the dire state of Quakerism in way that pushes my John Woolman button (hand-dyed, locally sourced). But then I step away and I remember that he also loves the hell out of obscure Brazilian music, lobsters and making Quakerism more cool for young people (among other things)

How can I forget that? Because I’m still caught up on some of my old notions of leadership. I’m slowly learning that people who make genuinely horizontal Way in community are first really genuinely themselves. Sometimes that means you appreciate them occasionally from a distance and don’t want to hang out with them, like Fox or Woolman. But my brother and Thomas Kelly, they are certainly not “sobersides Quakers who seem to live on a diet of spiritual persimmons”. They are those rare kind of people who are truly dedicated and unobtrusively, appealingly, fired up.While I may not always hear what they have to say the first time, when I get it I’ll follow their bliss.



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JULY 22, 2012 BY EVANCATEGORIES: BOOK REVIEW, QUAKER

5 COMMENTS
POST NAVIGATION
PROCESSION OF THE SPECIES 2012
SO MUCH FOR THE AFTERGLOW…

5 THOUGHTS ON “BOOK REVIEW: TESTAMENT OF DEVOTION”
Chel Avry says:
Jul 22, 2012 at 22:36


Maybe it’s time to give John Woolman a second chance, too.
REPLY

benjaminpressley says:
Jul 26, 2012 at 03:59


I really agree with what you say here. Thomas Kelly, like Thomas Merton, has at times been the thread that keeps me hanging on spiritually. I too find most 16th-18th century Quaker journals more or less insufferable. Needless to say I respect the contributions of both Fox and Woolman, but let’s face it, there’s more than a touch of self-righteousness and sadomasochism in Fox’s writing and gag-inducing sticky-sweet piety in Woolman’s. There’s a more, I don’t know…real quality to Kelly that makes me think of CS Lewis in A Grief Observed after the death of his wife. Lewis, like Kelly comes across as much more real when writing experientially
REPLY
benjaminpressley says:
Jul 30, 2012 at 22:12


17th-18th century journals, I should say. Obvious mistake.
REPLY

jon watts says:
Jul 30, 2012 at 04:10


Evan… good to hear your thoughts about Quaker writings and what you’ve been thinking about lately. Glad that Thomas Kelly is speaking to you, and that you have a vision for Quakerism. Keep writing!  Jon
REPLY

Evan says:
Sep 13, 2012 at 01:55


Thanks for your thoughts guys. It’s funny that you mention C.S. Lewis Ben, someone quoted from the Screwtape Letters to me the other day and now I think I’ll have to pick that one up next.
REPLY

2022/09/09

Social Work: Introducing Professional Practice: Higham, Patricia E: 9781412908573: Amazon.com: Books

Social Work: Introducing Professional Practice: Higham, Patricia E: 9781412908573: Amazon.com: Books


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Social Work: Introducing Professional Practice 1st Edition
by Patricia E Higham (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars 2 ratings

What is the role of social work? What does it mean to be a social worker? What are the changes affecting social work training?

Introduction to Social Work addresses these questions and provides an understanding of the knowledge, values, and skills requirements of professional social work. The author has played a key role in constructing the subject benchmarks for the social work degree and offers a reflective and thoughtful commentary upon training, education and practice. Written in a lively and readable style, the book captures the essence of the changes sweeping through social work and engages the reader in these debates.


Key features of this book include:

- Comprehensive content structured around the guidelines for training and practice

- Bridges the gap between theory and real-life practice

- Student-friendly features such as case-studies, discussion questions, further reading and a glossary



This exciting publication will be a core textbook for trainee social workers as they progress through the qualifying social work degree, or as they begin their practice as newly qualified workers seeking to consolidate their learning.



`The unique aspect of this book which distinguishes it from other competitors is that it is constructed explicitly around the key roles and benchmark statements...this book will offer something new and interesting to the growing field of social work education literature and is likely to be relevant to both students and practitioners in the UK and elsewhere′ - Dr Caroline Skehill, Queens University Belfast


Editorial Reviews

Review
′Comprehensive and user-friendly. The book is helpfully constructed around a number of key themes, starting with a good attempt to define social work from historical and international perspectives and moving on to address key issues concerning the practice, knowledge, values and skills required from contemporary social work in the UK. I believe social work students, newly qualified and experienced social workers will find ths a valuable resource, especially when one is confronted by challenges in practice′ - Professional Social Work



′Social Work is a good overview that should refresh learner and tutor alike. Pratice assessors may find this book a useful update for their work with students and also a neat refresher. It is a well-written and up-to-date text, with a good sense of where future challenges lie for the social work profession in the UK. Higham is confident enough to voice the profession′s uncertainties as well as mapping the changing organisational landscape that social workers might populate. [This book] is likely to appear on many social work reading lists. [It has] the potential to provide good learning opportunities for post-qualifying as well as pre-qualifying training′ -Health and Social Care in the Community
About the Author
Patricia Higham is a registered social worker and an independent social work consultant. She is a non-executive director of an NHS primary care trust and emeritus professor at Nottingham Trent University. She has been appointed Visiting Professor of Social Work at the University of Northampton.



She has written Social Work: Introducing Professional Practice (SAGE, 2006).




Product details
ASIN ‏ : ‎ 1412908574
Publisher ‏ : ‎ SAGE Publications Ltd; 1st edition (March 23, 2006)
Language ‏ : ‎ English
Paperback ‏ : ‎ 240 pages

Understanding Social Work Practice in Mental Health: 9781412935050: Coppock, Victoria, Dunn, R. W.: Books

Amazon.com: Understanding Social Work Practice in Mental Health: 9781412935050: Coppock, Victoria, Dunn, R. W.: Books

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Understanding Social Work Practice in Mental Health 1st Edition
by Victoria Coppock (Author), R. W. Dunn (Author)
4.9 out of 5 stars 28 ratings


This book provides an authoritative overview of mental health theory, policy, and practice. Exploring the complex moral and ethical dimensions underpinning the field, the book engages with the key issues encountered by practitioners working in the modern mental health system. Using real world scenarios, case studies, and reflective exercises, it asks students to critically examine the world of mental health practice from the perspective of users of mental health services and their careers.


Editorial Reviews

About the Author
Vicki Coppock is a Reader in Social Work and Mental Health at Edge Hill University, Ormskirk, Lancashire. She is also a qualified and experienced psychiatric social worker. She teaches in the areas of social work, mental health and childhood and youth studies. She has a research and publications record in the critical analysis of theory, policy, legislation and professional practice in the field of mental health, with a particular emphasis on asserting a positive rights agenda for children and young people in mental distress. She is co-author of Critical Perspectives on Mental Health (Routledge, 2000) with John Hopton.



Bob Dunn is a Senior Lecturer in Social Work Studies at Edge Hill University. Following work as a Local Authority Staff Development and Training Officer he has researched deaths in police, prison, and psychiatric custody and his current teaching covers youth justice, community care, mental health, childhood and youth studies.


Product details
Publisher ‏ : ‎ SAGE Publications Ltd; 1st edition (December 22, 2009)
Language ‏ : ‎ English
Paperback ‏ : ‎ 176 pages
4.9 out of 5 stars 28 ratings



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4.9 out of 5 stars



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4.0 out of 5 stars Four StarsReviewed in the United States on September 19, 2014
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5.0 out of 5 stars Great book for studentsReviewed in the United Kingdom on June 13, 2020
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Theories of Social Work - SR | PDF | Social Work | Theory

Theories of Social Work - SR | PDF | Social Work | Theory


===


===

Social Work and Social Care (School Concerns Series): Parrott, Lester: 9780415239707: Amazon.com: Books

Social Work and Social Care (School Concerns Series): Parrott, Lester: 9780415239707: Amazon.com: Books


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Lester Parrott
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Social Work and Social Care (School Concerns Series) 2nd Edition
by Lester Parrott  (Author)
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Social Work and Social Care has been revised and updated to take into account the profound changes that have occurred in social work over the past two years, in particular the extensive legislative changes to childrens and community care services. A new chapter examines the relevance of social exclusion for social work and continues to affirm the importance of equal opportunities and anti-discriminatory practice within social work.
Social Work and Social Care:
* outlines the importance of social policy for social work
* describes the powerful ideological forces that underpin current practice
* considers the future of social work and social care within * altered social and political contexts
* covers all main areas of social work
* includes a glossary and useful website addresses.
This book is essential reading for students approaching the study of social work, social care and social policy and includes the most current research available.
====
Social Work and Social Care

has been revised and updated to takeinto account the profound changes that have occurred in socialwork over the past two years,in particular the extensive legislativechanges to children’s and community care services.A new chapterexamines the relevance ofsocial exclusion for social work and con-tinues to affirm the importance ofequal opportunities andanti-discriminatory practice within social work.

Social Work and Social Care
outlines the importance ofsocial policy for social work
describes the powerful ideological forces that underpin currentpractice
considers the future ofsocial work and social care withinaltered social and political contexts
covers all main areas ofsocial work
includes a glossary and useful website addresses.This book is essential reading for students approaching the study of social work,social care and social policy and includes the mostcurrent research available.
Lester Parrott
is Senior Lecturer in Social Work at North EastWales Institute

===
 
Social Work and Social Care
Social Work and Social Care
has been revised and updated to takeinto account the profound changes that have occurred in socialwork over the past two years,in particular the extensive legislativechanges to children’s and community care services.A new chapterexamines the relevance ofsocial exclusion for social work and con-tinues to affirm the importance ofequal opportunities andanti-discriminatory practice within social work.
Social Work and Social Care
outlines the importance ofsocial policy for social work
describes the powerful ideological forces that underpin currentpractice
considers the future ofsocial work and social care withinaltered social and political contexts
covers all main areas ofsocial work
includes a glossary and useful website addresses.This book is essential reading for students approaching the study of social work,social care and social policy and includes the mostcurrent research available.
Lester Parrott
is Senior Lecturer in Social Work at North EastWales Institute.
 
Contents

List ofillustrationsixForewordxiForeword to the new editionxiiiAcknowledgementsxv
1Social policy,social work and social care
1
Outline1From social administration to social policy1What is social policy?2Issues for social policy3Social work and social policy5Case study6 Social policy and social work education7 Social work and the state9A mixed economy ofwelfare11Case study12Social work as an occupation13Value dilemmas and the purpose ofsocial work15Case study15Conclusion20Key points20Guide to further reading21
2Ideology and the rise ofsocial work
22
Outline22What is ideology?22The development ofsocial work25The post-war period32Conclusion40Key points40Guide to further reading40
 
3Anti-discriminatory practice and social exclusion
41
Outline41Social work in a divided society41From radical social work to anti-discriminatory practice45Social work and equal opportunities47 Equal opportunities,social work and exclusion49Conclusion63Key points63Guide to further reading64
4Residential care:the last resort?
65
Outline65What is residential care?65The origins ofresidential care67 Residential care and older people69Residential care for children and young people76 Conclusion84Key points84Guide to further reading85
5Community care
86
Outline86 What is community?86 History ofcommunity care88Community care and the Griffiths Report91The mixed economy and its consequences94Evaluating community care policy96 Conclusion110Key points111Guide to further reading111
6Policy dilemmas in child and family support
112
Outline112The family and the Welfare State112Different families114Competing perspectives and childcare policy116 
vi
Contents
 
The family,child protection and the PSS118Protection or prevention121From family support to children in need124Evaluating outcomes128Family support and disability130Conclusion132Key points132Guide to further reading133
7Citizenship and empowerment
134
Outline134Citizenship and social work134What is empowerment?140Consumers and citizens142Community care and empowerment147 Enabling and empowerment151Assessment and empowerment152Evaluating empowerment154Conclusion155Key points155Guide to further reading156 
8Social work in altered circumstances
157
Outline157 Social work and the Welfare State157 New Labour and the Welfare State165New Labour and devolution170New Labour’s moral agenda171New Labour and the PSS174Conclusion176 Key points178Guide to further reading179
Glossary180Some useful websites and journals185References188Index20

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Editorial Reviews
Review
'Were all my personal social service students to have read this book before we started, it would make my teaching much easier, and probably far more effective.' -John Baldock, University of Kent, Social Policy Association News



Were all my personal social service students to have read this book before we started, it would make my teaching much easier, and probably far more effective.' - John Baldock, University of Kent, Social Policy Association News

About the Author
Lester Parrott is Senior Lecturer in Social work at North East Wales Institute teaching social policy on professional and undergraduate courses. He worked for many years as a social worker for Derbyshire Social Services Department. He has written a number of books on social policy and social work, his most recent being Social Policy: Social Work Foundations, Prospects Publications.
Product details
Publisher ‏ : ‎ Routledge; 2nd edition (November 22, 2001)
Language ‏ : ‎ English

Understanding Emotions in Social Work: Theory, Practice and Reflection: Theory, Practice and Reflection - Ingram, Richard | 9780335263868 | Amazon.com.au | Books

Understanding Emotions in Social Work: Theory, Practice and Reflection: Theory, Practice and Reflection - Ingram, Richard | 9780335263868 | Amazon.com.au | Books

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Understanding Emotions in Social Work: Theory, Practice and Reflection: Theory, Practice and Reflection Paperback – 11 August 2015
by Richard Ingram (Author)
4.3 out of 5 stars 5 ratings
Part of: UK Higher Education OUP Humanities & Social Sciences Health & Social Welfare (121 books)


This practical guide will help social work students and practitioners to recognize, reflect upon and use emotions in their practice.
==


Contents
 Acknowledgements
ix

Introduction 1
Part 1: What are emotions and why are they important insocial work? 7
1 What are emotions? 9
2 Locating emotions in the context of social work 26
3 Reflection and the exploration of emotions 43

Part 2: Applying and understanding emotions in social work practice 59
4 Engaging and communicating with service users and carers 61
5 Emotions and written recordings in social work 75
6 Emotions, supervision, and support 90
7 Organizational culture and emotions 105
8 Emotions and the social work professional 11
9 Concluding thoughts 134

 References
137
 Index
145

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How social workers understand and use their emotions in practice: A thematic synthesis literature review
Louise O’Connor
First Published April 23, 2019 Research Article
https://doi.org/10.1177/1473325019843991
Article information 
Article has an altmetric score of 43 No Access

Abstract
Emotions are intrinsic to social work. Social workers engage with people at points of crisis or need. The emotions of both practitioners and the people they interact with are central to the lived experience of practice. This paper presents a thematic synthesis of empirical studies which illuminate how social workers understand and use their emotions in practice. A search of electronic databases and reference harvesting located 28 papers which were screened against inclusion criteria and appraisal tools. Four analytic themes were identified: emotions as a dynamic relational resource; patterns of organisational and professional relationships; ambivalence, dissonance and distance and the place of emotions in professionalism and identity. Patterns and themes were found in diverse settings. This review brings together a small but valuable knowledge base. Findings suggest that emotions constitute a paradox for social work and are potentially a constructive resource. The paper concludes with suggestions for further research into the situated emotions of social work practice.
===
 
Praise for this book

“This is a timely publication that reinforces the centrality of emotions andemotional intelligence in social work practice – a must read for all aspiring andpractising social workers.”
Gillian Ruch,
 
 Professor of Social Work, School of Education and Social Work,University of Sussex, UK
---
“What Understanding Emotions in Social Work does is cuts across all layers ofthe social work curriculum and indeed the “resistance and lethargy’’ regarding“the role of emotions within social work practice” that Ingram refers to. Itaffords us with a medium through which to explore the substance of that whichcauses us to react and provides us with a space in which to learn more about whatit means to respond; both to ourselves and to those we engage with.It is a book for anyone involved in professional social work education andpractice; one that will become a well-thumbed addition to the discerning practi-tioner’s library.”
 
 Amanda M L Taylor, Senior Lecturer, School of Social Work,University of Central Lancashire, UK
---
“Understanding Emotions in Social Work: Theory, practice and reflection,highlights the importance of emotion in social work practice. Dr Richard Ingram clearly makes the case that the recognition of, reflection upon, responsivenessto, and regulation of emotion, contributes to effective social work practice, as well as, the development of healthy practitioners and practice environments.This book reinforces how social work is primarily a human interactive andrelational practice in which emotion and affect have a pivotal role. I highlyrecommend Understanding Emotions in Social Work as an essential text forstudents, social workers, supervisors and managers.”

 Associate Professor Kieran O’Donoghue, Head of School of Social Work, Massey University, New Zealan

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Keywords 
Social work practice, emotions, relationship-based, professionalism, unconscious processes, relational


===
Product description

About the Author
Richard Ingram is a senior lecturer in Social Work and Associate Dean for Taught Postgraduate Studies at the University of Dundee, UK.


Product details
Publisher ‏ : ‎ Open University Press; ed edition (11 August 2015)
Language ‏ : ‎ English
Paperback ‏ : ‎ 160 pages
4.3 out of 5 stars 5 ratings


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5.0 out of 5 stars A read for every social workerReviewed in the United Kingdom on 13 June 2018
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Best book ever enjoyed and read it from cover to cover

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Introduction to Social Work& Social Welfare CRITICAL THINKING PERSPECTIVES

Introduction in Social Work | PDF | Mental Disorder | Social Work

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Introduction to Social Work& Social Welfare
CRITICAL THINKING PERSPECTIVES
3rd EDITION
KAREN K. KIRST-ASHMAN
==





Introduction to Social Work & Social Welfare: Critical Thinking Perspectives 3rd Edition
by Karen K. Kirst-Ashman (Author)
4.2 out of 5 stars 82 ratings

Intended for the Introduction to Social Work/Social Welfare course found in programs of social work at both the undergraduate and graduate levels. This course can also be found in human service and sociology departments.

Editorial Reviews

About the Author
Karen K. Kirst-Ashman is Professor Emerita and former chairperson in the Social Work Department at the University of Wisconsin-Whitewater, where she taught for 28 years. She has written six social work textbooks in multiple editions and numerous publications, articles, and reviews on social work and women's issues. She also has served on the Editorial Board of AFFILIA: Journal of Women and Social Work, and as a consulting editor for many social work journals including the Journal of Social Work Education. Dr. Kirst-Ashman has been a member on the Board of the Council on Social Work Education (CSWE) and has served as a CSWE accreditation site visitor on various occasions. She is a Licensed Clinical Social Worker in the state of Wisconsin. She has been the recipient of both the University of Wisconsin-Whitewater Roseman Award for Excellence in Teaching and the University Outstanding Teaching Award. She earned her BSW degree and MSSW degree at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and her Ph.D. in social work at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. She has worked as a practitioner and administrator in child welfare and mental health agencies.


Product details
Publisher ‏ : ‎ Brooks Cole; 3rd edition (March 10, 2009)
Language ‏ : ‎ English
Hardcover ‏ : ‎ 512 pages
ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0495601683
ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0495601685
Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 2.45 pounds
Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 8.11 x 0.91 x 10 inchesBest Sellers Rank: #2,549,753 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)#2,244 in Arts & Humanities Teaching Materials
#5,470 in Social Work (Books)
#36,303 in Social Sciences (Books)Customer Reviews:
4.2 out of 5 stars 82 ratings




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Karen Kay Kirst-Ashman



Karen K. Kirst-Ashman has been a full professor and former chairperson in the social work department at the University of Wisconsin-Whitewater, where she has taught for 28 years. She has written six social work textbooks in multiple editions and numerous publications, articles, and reviews on social work and women’s issues. She also has served as a consulting editor on many social work journals. Dr. Kirst-Ashman was a board member of the CSWE from 1998 to 2001 and has served as a CSWE accreditation site visitor on various occasions. She is certified as a licensed clinical social worker in the state of Wisconsin and has been the recipient of the University of Wisconsin-Whitewater Roseman Award for Excellence in Teaching. She earned her BSW degree in 1972 and MSSW degree in 1973 at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and her Ph.D. in Social Work at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.


Top reviews from the United States


Nichi

5.0 out of 5 stars Great Text, especially for the priceReviewed in the United States on January 29, 2014
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I had to get this textbook for my intro to Social Work class. The university bookstore wanted over $200. Amazon seemed like a better deal here. The text is easy to read and comprehensive as it gets for an introduction. If you have an interest in Social Work, this book will give you about as much information as you need to dip your feet in.

Also, do note it is focused on American social work. While global and international social work is, of course, represented, the core values and such are from the NASW, so your mileage may vary in other nations if you want details on certain professional aspects.

25 people found this helpful

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Bookaholics Bookshelf Reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars A book for a career tiimeReviewed in the United States on April 19, 2018
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I'm currently using this for one of my Social work classes I should have completed when I first entered the program. I was interested enough to learn that this is a book that I will keep for the rest of my educational career as well my working career.


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Amanda

4.0 out of 5 stars BindingReviewed in the United States on August 29, 2013
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The book is exactly what I needed however in Brand New condition the binding was falling apart. Nothing a little super glue couldn't fix though!

13 people found this helpful

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luis leon

4.0 out of 5 stars Four StarsReviewed in the United States on September 8, 2014
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Book came as promised


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Stacy

5.0 out of 5 stars YayReviewed in the United States on February 20, 2013
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I used this book for an introduction to social work class. I still have it and it comes in handy when I forget something I learned previously and I need to look it up again.

19 people found this helpful

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Linseylouwho

3.0 out of 5 stars its ok...Reviewed in the United States on October 11, 2012
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Not bad for the price. Not too exciting though. I know there is a newer version noe but my professor said we could use this one.

8 people found this helpful

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Morgan Citera

5.0 out of 5 stars This is great for new social workers and learning how to handle ...Reviewed in the United States on July 16, 2014
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This is great for new social workers and learning how to handle clients! It is also GREAT with defining terms and basic knowledge that is needed to know!!


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Y. Gooden

2.0 out of 5 stars Introduction to Social Work & Social Welfare: Critical Thinking PerspectivesReviewed in the United States on July 4, 2012
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I received the item in the required limit, however, within one week of this course the binding and completely fallen apart. Sadly it seems you get what you pay for. Wasn't a very good deal after all.

9 people found this helpful

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Jan 13, 2015Lindsay Allyson rated it did not like it
Shelves: textbooks
This textbook was terrible. While the basics of social work were presented in the book, it was poorly structured. The author's biases on different political views was very apparent and often offensive, even to someone who shares some of the author's beliefs.


It was an easy-ish read, but it was just a bad book. (less)
flag1 like · Like · comment · see review
Alicia
Apr 18, 2008Alicia rated it liked it
its oh kk needs a dictionary
flagLike · comment · see review

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Top reviews from United Kingdom
Amazon Customer
5.0 out of 5 stars A read for every social worker
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 13 June 2018
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Best book ever enjoyed and read it from cover to cover
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Darren G
5.0 out of 5 stars Great Text Book
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 15 November 2015
This is one of those books that you will keep on your desk and look back at time and time again. It is written in a very accessible style and is easily picked up. Dr Ingram locates emotions within social work practice and guides the reader through a number of case study's and learning activities to explore this concept in-depth. This has been a very helpful text book during my final placement.
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Amazon Customer
5.0 out of 5 stars Highly recommended.
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 13 November 2015
This is an amazing book. It is a must read for all involved in the social work profession. The author locates emotions within social work practice and guides the reader to explore this concept in-depth. This book has been an invaluable resource to me whilst I have been on my final placement. I will certainly dip in and out of this book for years to come.
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Amazon Customer
5.0 out of 5 stars great resource
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 24 September 2015
Richard's book provides a depth consideration of emotion and the nature of what this means for social work. For students, practitioners and educators the book has excellent learning activities interspersed which could be used for individual reflection or by educators for group activities. I also liked the connection of emotions to the organisational context of social work and the relationships within supervision. A few diagrams help provide a framework for applying the ideas in practice and case examples bring the ideas to life. Looking forward to dipping back in and out of this for different ideas.
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Kindle Customer
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent social work text book on emotional literacy
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 29 September 2015
Dr Ingram's book is a helpful contribution to the literature on the 'emotional labour' of social work practice. Social work is an emotionally demanding profession because it requires us to meaningfully engage with adults and children in crises and distress. This book is perfect for students and newly qualified workers as it comprehensively explores the spaces where emotions are felt and expressed in day to day social work and how organsiational and supervisory arrangements impact on our capacity to reflect on and learn from emotions in practice. The author is particularly good at exploring the relevance of emotional literacy to rarely discussed but important areas of social work practice: note taking for instance or the support that colleagues provide in the work place. Case examples and learning points are helpfully threaded through the text. Ultimately there's something here for any practitoner who wants to refine their skills in self-reflection and use this as a springboard to more effective working relationships with servuce users and other professionals.
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Alex Summer
5.0 out of 5 stars Comprehensive and thoughtful exploration of the role of emotion in social work.
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 30 October 2015
The book has a logical structure, starting with what are emotions and looking at the area of emotion from a range of perspectives, so the reader is not conditioned to accept one definition and instead encouraged to thoroughly engage with what may be meant by the concept of emotion. This book is not just a theoretical exploration, though, and strong practice links come over, making it a useful resource for students and practitioners at any stage of their career. Ingram’s conceptual framework for understanding emotions provides a foundation for exploring and understanding the role of emotion in social work and he goes on to link this framework to social work practice.

Self-awareness is key to ensuring emotions contribute positively, not negatively, to practice and I like how in chapter 2 the reader is encouraged to reflect on significant events in their ‘lifeline’ and think about their own experience of emotions and the potential impact of this on their practice as a social worker. Case studies at various points throughout the book encourage and enable the reader to think about the role of emotion in professional practice and to explore their own feelings.

Ingram explores how emotion and reason do not have to be at odds, and debates surrounding the role of emotion in social work practice are considered – what may be meant by emotion is easier to conceptualise having read chapter 1, which goes back to my point about the book having a logical structure.

Chapter 3 provides a comprehensive exploration of the role and process of reflection, models and methods, as well as the significant topic of emotional intelligence – key aspects for professional practice and continuous professional development.

In part 2 the book moves on to how, now more is understood about emotion in social work, this may be applied to and considered more deeply in terms of social work practice -

Firstly this is looked at in terms of building relationships with service users and carers – how an appropriate level of emotion may be invested in this, taking a relationship-based approach, and exploring some of the skills in relationship building, linking these to the role emotion may be playing here. Ingram emphasises the importance of messages from research into service user and carer perspectives, and the meaningful involvement of service users and carers in social work education - a view I equally hold as a lecturer in this field.

Sometimes at interview applicants state one of their skills as ‘empathy’ and I ask them, what do you think that means? Ingram explores the key role of empathy in relationship building and how that can be achieved, how we may put the concept into words, and he considers key influences on empathic relationships.

Ingram also highlights the importance of writing in social work and considers how much emotions should have a place in this, plus an important inclusion of a section on reflective writing - a skill we encourage students to practise and practise. The book goes on to explore the importance of supervision and support and how supervision may be used effectively as a place for the supervisor and supervisee to explore the emotional context of practice and characteristics of an effective supervisory relationship are considered. We teach social work students about the importance of supervision and this is a key part of supporting their development on placement. There is also a useful exploration of the impact of organisational culture and the role of emotion in organisations.

Throughout, the book helpfully picks out earlier themes and reiterates key points from earlier chapters, without being repetitive. In the final chapter before his concluding thoughts, drawing key themes together Ingram puts forward a model locating emotion at the heart of being a social work professional.

I found Understanding Emotions in Social Work thought-provoking and compelling, a book that shows great appreciation of the complexities of social work practice and explores the role of emotion in social work sensitively, and with care.

Alex Summer
Senior Lecturer in Social Work, MA Social Work Programme Leader
University of Sunderland
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Decriminalising sex work in Victoria | Victorian Government

Decriminalising sex work in Victoria | Victorian Government



Decriminalising sex work in Victoria

The Victorian Government is decriminalising sex work to achieve better public health and human rights outcomes.


On 22 February 2022 the Sex Work Decriminalisation Act 2022 was passed by the Victorian Parliament and has become law.

The new laws recognise that sex work is legitimate work and is better regulated through standard business laws, like all other industries in the state. Every Victorian worker, no matter their industry, deserves to feel safe in their workplace.
What decriminalisation changes

Decriminalisation of sex work in Victoria will occur in two stages to allow time to transition to a different model of regulation.

The first stage commenced on 10 May 2022 and includes:the decriminalisation of street-based sex work in most locations
the repeal of offences for working with a sexually transmitted infection and requirements to undergo regular STI testing
the repeal of offences for individual sex workers not using safer sex practices
the repeal of the small owner-operator sex work service provider register
changes to advertising controls applicable to the sex work industry
amendments to the Equal Opportunity Act 2010.

The second stage is expected to commence in December 2023 and will include:abolishing the sex work service provider licensing system by repealing the Sex Work Act 1994
re-enacting offences relating to children and coercion in other legislation to ensure their continued operation following repeal of the Sex Work Act 1994
changes to planning controls to treat sex service businesses like other businesses
the establishment of appropriate liquor controls for the sex work industry
the repeal of brothel and escort agency provisions in the Public Health and Wellbeing Act 2008 to remove specific sex work industry controls.

The changes allow industry regulation to be managed through existing agencies, such as WorkSafe, the Department of Health and local governments. The Victorian Government will continue to work with key stakeholders including, sex workers, their peer organisations, local councils, and other key stakeholders to ensure the reforms are implemented in the best way possible.
Background to the decriminalisation of sex work in Victoria
Why we are decriminalising

Decriminalisation ensures that sex work is safe work and just like any other work. It maximises sex workers' safety, health, and human rights, while also reducing stigma and fear of criminal repercussions.

In Victoria, sex work is currently regulated under a legalised model, which means sex work is only legal if it takes place under certain conditions set out in the Sex Work Act 1994.

The licensing system is outdated and difficult to navigate for those trying to work within it.

Those without a licence, or those practising street-based sex work, are breaking the law and therefore do not have access to basic rights and entitlements.

Sex workers can be put off from engaging with support systems like healthcare providers, the justice system, or other government services because they fear being stigmatised or possibly receiving criminal penalties.
The benefits of decriminalisation

Sex workers have lived experience that demonstrates that the system under the Sex Work Act 1994 puts them at risk of harm and is not fit for purpose.

The Sex Work Decriminalisation Act 2022 ensures:sex workers have more agency to choose where they provide their services and their sexual health requirements
sex workers are regulated like workers in any other industry to help address stigma and discrimination
sex workers have better access to health, and legal services without fear of self-incrimination
increased transparency to help discourage criminal infiltration of the sector
offences relating to sex trafficking, children, coercion and other criminal activity continue to apply.
What has informed this change

In November 2019, the Victorian Government asked Fiona Patten MP to lead a review to make recommendations to the Minister for Consumer Affairs Victoria on decriminalising sex work in Victoria.

After carefully considering the review, the government decided to decriminalise sex work in Victoria.

The review consulted with a range of stakeholders to seek their views. This included: sex workers, sex worker peer organisations, legal, health and education support service providers, commercial operators and industry organisations, and workplace safety agencies, local government and Federal Government agencies, law enforcement agencies, and other community and expert organisations.

In making her recommendations, Ms Patten was asked to consider:all forms of sex work, including sex work in commercial brothels and escort agencies, sexual services provided in massage parlours and similar businesses, sex work by small owner-operated businesses, and street-based sex work
workplace safety including health and safety issues and stigma and discrimination against sex workers
regulatory requirements for operators of commercial sex work businesses
enforcement powers required to address criminal activity in the sex work industry, including coercion, exploitation, debt bondage and slavery
local amenity and the location of premises providing sexual services and street-based sex work
the promotion of public health and appropriate regulation of sex work advertising
the safety and wellbeing of sex workers, including the experience of violence that arises in the course of sex work and as a consequence of it, and worker advocacy for safety and wellbeing.

The review also looked at the decriminalisation of sex work in other jurisdictions including New Zealand and other Australian states and territories.
Public consultation

During August 2021, the Victorian Government undertook public consultation on the proposed model for the decriminalisation of sex work in Victoria. The consultation period has now closed. For further information on the consultation you can visit Engage Victoria.
More information

Please see below for links to important regulators and other support services for the sex work industry:The Department of Health is responsible for public health matters.
The Victorian Equal Opportunity and Human Rights Commission is responsible for implementing amendments to the Equal Opportunity Act 2010
WorkSafe Victoria is responsible for occupational health and safety and workplace compensation in the sex work industry, as in all other industries
Victoria Police is responsible for ensuring community safety
The Department of Environment, Land, Water and Planning is responsible for changes to Victoria’s planning system
Consumer Affairs Victoria provides information for the sex work industry including an overview of changes to the regulations governing sex work, and useful factsheets for the industry.
Vixen provides peer support services and information for those working within the sex work industry.


Reviewed 13 July 2022

Why Sex Work Should Be Decriminalized | Human Rights Watch

Why Sex Work Should Be Decriminalized | Human Rights Watch

August 7, 2019 3:31AM EDTAvailable InEnglish
简体中文

Why Sex Work Should Be Decriminalized

Questions and Answers

Human Rights Watch has conducted research on sex work around the world, including in Cambodia, China, Tanzania, the United States, and most recently, South Africa. The research, including extensive consultations with sex workers and organizations that work on the issue, has shaped the Human Rights Watch policy on sex work: Human Rights Watch supports the full decriminalization of consensual adult sex work.

Why is criminalization of sex work a human rights issue?

Criminalizing adult, voluntary, and consensual sex – including the commercial exchange of sexual services – is incompatible with the human right to personal autonomy and privacy. In short – a government should not be telling consenting adults who they can have sexual relations with and on what terms.

Criminalization exposes sex workers to abuse and exploitation by law enforcement officials, such as police officers. Human Rights Watch has documented that, in criminalized environments, police officers harass sex workers, extort bribes, and physically and verbally abuse sex workers, or even rape or coerce sex from them.

Human Rights Watch has consistently found in research across various countries that criminalization makes sex workers more vulnerable to violence, including rape, assault, and murder, by attackers who see sex workers as easy targets because they are stigmatized and unlikely to receive help from the police. Criminalization may also force sex workers to work in unsafe locations to avoid the police.

Criminalization consistently undermines sex workers’ ability to seek justice for crimes against them. Sex workers in South Africa, for example, said they did not report armed robbery or rape to the police. They said that they are afraid of being arrested because their work is illegal and that their experience with police is of being harassed or profiled and arrested, or laughed at or not taken seriously. Even when they report crimes, sex workers may not be willing to testify in court against their assailants and rapists for fear of facing sanctions or further abuse because of their work and status.

UNAIDS, public health experts, sex worker organizations, and other human rights organizations have found that criminalization of sex work also has a negative effect on sex workers’ right to health. In one example, Human Rights Watch found in a 2012 report, “Sex Workers at Risk: Condoms as Evidence of Prostitution in Four US Cities,” that police and prosecutors used a sex worker’s possession of condoms as evidence to support prostitution charges. The practice left sex workers reluctant to carry condoms for fear of arrest, forcing them to engage in sex without protection and putting them at heightened risk of contracting HIV and other sexually transmitted diseases.

Criminalization also has a negative effect on other human rights. In countries that ban sex work, sex workers are less likely to be able to organize as workers, advocate for their rights, or to work together to support and protect themselves.

How does decriminalizing sex work help protect sex workers?

Decriminalizing sex work maximizes sex workers’ legal protection and their ability to exercise other key rights, including to justice and health care. Legal recognition of sex workers and their occupation maximizes their protection, dignity, and equality. This is an important step toward destigmatizing sex work.

Does decriminalizing sex work encourage other human rights violations such as human trafficking and sexual exploitation of children?

Sex work is the consensual exchange of sex between adults. Human trafficking and sexual exploitation of children are separate issues. They are both serious human rights abuses and crimes and should always be investigated and prosecuted.

Laws that clearly distinguish between sex work and crimes like human trafficking and sexual exploitation of children help protect both sex workers and crime victims. Sex workers may be in a position to have important information about crimes such as human trafficking and sexual exploitation of children, but unless the work they themselves do is not treated as criminal, they are unlikely to feel safe reporting this information to the police.

What should governments do?

Governments should fully decriminalize sex work and ensure that sex workers do not face discrimination in law or practice. They should also strengthen services for sex workers and ensure that they have safe working conditions and access to public benefits and social safety nets.

Moreover, any regulations and controls on sex workers and their activities need to be nondiscriminatory and otherwise comply with international human rights law. For example, restrictions that would prevent those engaged in sex work from organizing collectively, or working in a safe environment, are not legitimate restrictions.

Why does Human Rights Watch support full decriminalization rather than the “Nordic model?”

The “Nordic model,” first introduced in Sweden, makes buying sex illegal, but does not prosecute the seller, the sex worker. Proponents of the Nordic model see “prostitution” as inherently harmful and coerced; they aim to end sex work by killing the demand for transactional sex. Disagreement between organizations seeking full decriminalization of sex work and groups supporting the Nordic model has been a contentious issue within the women’s rights community in many countries and globally.

Human Rights Watch supports full decriminalization rather than the Nordic model because research shows that full decriminalization is a more effective approach to protecting sex workers’ rights. Sex workers themselves also usually want full decriminalization.

The Nordic model appeals to some politicians as a compromise that allows them to condemn buyers of sex but not people they see as having been forced to sell sex. But the Nordic model actually has a devastating impact on people who sell sex to earn a living. Because its goal is to end sex work, it makes it harder for sex workers to find safe places to work, unionize, work together and support and protect one another, advocate for their rights, or even open a bank account for their business. It stigmatizes and marginalizes sex workers and leaves them vulnerable to violence and abuse by police as their work and their clients are still criminalized.

Isn’t sex work a form of sexual violence?

No. When an adult makes a decision of her, his, or their own free will to exchange sex for money, that is not sexual violence.

When a sex worker is the victim of a crime, including sexual violence, the police should promptly investigate and refer suspects for prosecution. When a person exchanges sex for money as a result of coercion – for example by a pimp – or experiences violence from a pimp or a customer, or is a victim of trafficking, these are serious crimes. The police should promptly
investigate and refer the case for prosecution.

Sex workers are often exposed to high levels of violence and other abuse or harm, but this is usually because they are working in a criminalized environment. Research by Human Rights Watch and others indicates that decriminalization can help reduce crime, including sexual violence, against sex workers.

Aside from decriminalizing sex work, what other policies does Human Rights Watch support with regard to sex workers’ rights?

People engaged in voluntary sex work may come from backgrounds of poverty or marginalization and face discrimination and inequality, including in their access to the job market. With this in mind, Human Rights Watch supports measures to improve the human rights situation for sex workers, including research and access to education, financial support, job training and placement, social services, and information. Human Rights Watch also encourages efforts to address discrimination based on gender, sexual orientation, gender identity, race, ethnicity, or immigration status affecting sex workers.

Human Rights Watch research documenting abuse against sex workers:Why We’ve Filed a Lawsuit Against a US Federal Law Targeting Sex Workers, June 2018
Greece: Police Abusing Marginalized People: Target the Homeless, Drug Users, Sex Workers in Athens, March 2015
“I’m Scared to Be a Woman”: Human Rights Abuses Against Transgender People in Malaysia, September 2014
In Harm’s Way: State Response to Sex Workers, Drug Users and HIV in New Orleans, December 2013
“Swept Away”: Abuses Against Sex Workers in China, May 2013
“Treat Us Like Human Beings”: Discrimination against Sex Workers, Sexual and Gender Minorities, and People Who Use Drugs in Tanzania, June 2013
Off the Streets: Arbitrary Detention and Other Abuses against Sex Workers in Cambodia, July 2010
Sex Workers at Risk: Condoms as Evidence of Prostitution in Four US Cities, July 2012

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MORE READING

August 7, 2019 News Release
South Africa: Decriminalise Sex Work


June 29, 2018 Dispatches
Why We’ve Filed a Lawsuit Against a US Federal Law Targeting Sex Workers