美德的流行病:社会工作在“卖淫”干预中的复杂性述评

IF 2.2 3区 社会学 Q1 Social Sciences
R. Welch, Rong Zhao
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本文探讨了上个世纪美国社会工作在人道主义和刑事法律应对性工作方面的作用。我们的历史回顾表明,通过在性工作者的刑事定罪和康复方面的跨学科合作,社会工作者为“卖淫”从性工作者的权利问题转变为心理、刑事法律和医学现象做出了贡献。这加剧了性工作者所遭受的伤害和耻辱。在探索从进步时代到新自由主义兴起的社会工作对性工作的干预时,本文将其现代迭代——卖淫分流规划置于社会工作与性工作者的尸体历史背景下。我们选择这些时期并不是因为它们的时间性,而是因为这些历史干预中的突出主题,这些主题是现代分流计划的特征:权力和控制、惩罚性服务提供、父权制救援和尸体女权主义。为了与社会工作对社会正义和客户自决的授权相一致,本文提供了基于性工作非刑事化和从警察和法院撤资的政策和实践启示。在劳工、种族、性别和移民正义的背景下,探索并采用性工作者倡导的替代服务方法。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
An Epidemic of Virtue: A Review of Social Work's Complicity in “Prostitution” Interventions
This article engages with the field of social work's role in humanitarian and criminal legal responses to sex work in the United States over the last century. Our historical review reveals that, through interdisciplinary collaboration in the criminalization and rehabilitation of sex workers, social workers have contributed to the transformation of “prostitution” from an issue of sex workers’ rights to a psychological, criminal legal, and medical phenomenon. This has exacerbated the harm and stigma experienced by sex workers. In exploring social work interventions on sex work from the Progressive Era through the rise of neoliberalism, this article places its modern iteration, prostitution diversion programming, within the context of social work's carceral history with sex workers. We choose these periods not for their chronicity, but rather for the salient themes in these historical interventions that characterize modern diversion programming: power and control, punitive service provision, patriarchal rescue, and carceral feminism. To align with social work's mandate for social justice and client self-determination, this article offers policy and practice implications grounded in the decriminalization of sex work and divestment from the police and courts. Alternative service approaches spearheaded by sex workers are explored and placed within the context of labor, racial, gender, and immigration justice.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.40
自引率
9.10%
发文量
63
期刊介绍: Affilia: Journal of Women and Social Work is dedicated to the discussion and development of feminist values, theories, and knowledge as they relate to social work and social welfare research, education, and practice. The intent of Affilia is to bring insight and knowledge to the task of eliminating discrimination and oppression, especially with respect to gender, race, ethnicity, class, age, disability, and sexual and affectional preference.
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