2000
DOI: 10.15760/etd.6396
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The Intersections of Good Intentions, Criminality, and Anti-Carceral Feminist Logic: A Qualitative Study that Explores Sex Trades Content in Social Work Education

Abstract: This study uses anti-carceral feminist logic to explore the cultural meanings, criminal implications, and neoliberal influence that shape the landscape of social work education about the sex trades in the United States and transnationally. "What are social work instructors teaching students about the sex trades in coursework?" is the question that directs the study, which uses a feminist qualitative methodology inclusive of intersectional feminist epistemology as well as direct content analysis. To answer this… Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…If social workers are currently only able to programmatically assist sex workers who have the capacity to comply with the demands of the state, we must dismantle police collaborations and shift to an anti-carceral social work model to provide life-affirming services to sex workers (Jacobs et al, 2021). However, the current knowledge we receive about sex workers primes us to assume that all sex workers need to be rescued with the help of carceral interventions (Panichelli, 2018). This study contributes to other studies that worked collaboratively with sex workers to co-produce knowledge that is affirming of their experiences to inform policy and practice (Desyllas, 2013; Grittner & Sitter, 2020; Wahab, 2004).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…If social workers are currently only able to programmatically assist sex workers who have the capacity to comply with the demands of the state, we must dismantle police collaborations and shift to an anti-carceral social work model to provide life-affirming services to sex workers (Jacobs et al, 2021). However, the current knowledge we receive about sex workers primes us to assume that all sex workers need to be rescued with the help of carceral interventions (Panichelli, 2018). This study contributes to other studies that worked collaboratively with sex workers to co-produce knowledge that is affirming of their experiences to inform policy and practice (Desyllas, 2013; Grittner & Sitter, 2020; Wahab, 2004).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The Violence Against Women Act and Mass Incarceration. In 1994, the federal government passed the Violence Against Women Act, injecting 800 million dollars into law enforcement agencies to increase arrest policies, prosecute domestic violence, and create services for survivors of domestic violence (Panichelli, 2018). It also sent 100,000 more police into the streets and earmarked 10 billion dollars for prisons (Mac & Smith, 2018).…”
Section: The Age Of Neoliberalism and The Rise Of Retributive Punishmentmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…They have resulted in a myriad of programs that leverage arrest, compliance with law enforcement, and subjugation to moral rescue from the sex trade to aid "victims of crime," even when voluntarily chosen as forms of work (Bernstein, 2010;Panichelli, 2018). Indeed, the TOWARDS ANTI-CARCERAL SOCIAL WORK 11 landmark legislation applauded for its recognition of gender-based violence as a crime, the Violence Against Women Act (VAWA) of 1994, was passed as a part of the Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act, federal legislation featuring a set of draconian policies that further accelerated hyperincarceration and concretized collaboration between the anti-violence field and the carceral state (Kim, 2013).…”
Section: Carceral Feminism and Ties To Law Enforcementmentioning
confidence: 99%