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Elizabeth Anne Wood Sociology Nassau Community College, NY

Bridging Communities in Sex Work Research Elizabeth Anne Wood Michael Goodyear Society for the Scientific Study of Sexuality St Petersburg, Florida June 5 2009. Elizabeth Anne Wood Sociology Nassau Community College, NY.

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Elizabeth Anne Wood Sociology Nassau Community College, NY

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  1. Bridging Communities inSex Work Research Elizabeth Anne WoodMichael GoodyearSociety for the Scientific Study of SexualitySt Petersburg, Florida June 5 2009

  2. Elizabeth Anne WoodSociologyNassau Community College, NY

  3. Michael GoodyearMedicineDalhousie University, Nova Scotia Research Ethics, Capital District Health Authority

  4. DISCLOSURE

  5. Elizabeth

  6. Michael X Chromosomally Challenged

  7. Learning objectives I • Understand why sex workers distrust and lie to researchers • Understand how research and the research agenda harms sex workers • Propose ways to repair damaged trust • Understand ethical issues in sex work research and how to navigate them to produce research of high ethical and scientific quality

  8. Learning objectives II • Use examples of collaborative and problematic research in order to suggest ways of improving problematic studies

  9. Learning objectives III Participatory activities • Roleplay an escort negotiating with a difficult researcher • Roleplay a pro domme negotiating with a difficult client • Perform a passable pole dance. • Become a better ally or sex worker researcher If you can stay awake long enough!

  10. Audience input • Your learning objectives • What disciplines/backgrounds represented? • Who has performed sex work research? • Is planning to? • Your experiences? • Sex work experience?

  11. Brief overview • Why we do research • Research design • Research dissemination • Responding to research • Discussion • ethics • ways of knowing • funding dilemmas • New directions for sex work research

  12. Why do we do research? The pursuit of knowledge

  13. “The aim of science is not to open a door to infinite wisdom but to set a limit to infinite error” Brecht B. The Life of Galileo(Leben des Galilei) 1943 Bertolt Brecht (1898 –1956)

  14. Why we do research • Academic advancement • Professional reputation • Funding agencies • Government priorities • - How does the Research Agenda construct ‘social problems’

  15. Issues • The Research Agenda • highly politicised* • ethical implications largely overlooked • sex workers mistrust and resist researchers “living off the backs of sex workers” *Kempner J (2008) The Chilling effect: How Do Researchers React to Controversy? PLoS Med 5(11): e222

  16. Ethical principle I Respect for Persons (Autonomy) “act as to treat humanity…in every case as an end..never as a means” Kant I: Groundwork of the metaphysics of morals (1785)

  17. Ethical principle II • Distributive justice • Burdens of research must be distributed fairly • Research cannot be performed on one population for the benefit of another Aristotle: Nicomachean Ethics

  18. Sex Workers’ Experiences with Researchers & Problematic Research

  19. The Internet: A blessing and a curse I’m a labor economist researching the escort market and got your email off the internet.  I’m hoping to collect some field evidence from current or former workers in this profession.   Any feedback that you could give would be great, and will of course be kept completely confidential and used for research purposes only. 1. Do you still provide escort or companionship services?a. I’m still active.b. No, I’m no longer active.

  20. The Internet: A blessing and a curse • Greetings,You have been randomly selected to participate in a survey by the Criminal Justice Department at (…..University).  This is a study designed to understand the ways that you use technology, including computers and the Internet in the course of your profession and day to day lives.…This study will also ask questions addressing when you first began to use the Internet in the course of your job and your reasons for using websites, such as the EscortBlogs as a means to communicate with clients and other providers.  …

  21. Sex Worker Research on Researcher When the escort who sent us the email followed the researcher’s link she found a research agenda that included: • computer crime, the role that technology and the Internet play in crime and deviance... the behaviour of “sexual deviants” on-line…has published research on the use of the internet by clients…. And that the researcher collaborates: • with law enforcement… to understand the technological and social elements of computer crime. 

  22. Big Brothel - A Survey of the off-street sex industry in London. Poppy Project, August 2008 http://sexinthepublicsquare.org/files/u1/Big_Brothel_Poppy_2008.pdf

  23. Wednesday 10 September 2008 Revealed: the truth about brothels A survey into London's off-street sex industry has exposed just how widespread it is - and documents in disturbing detail the plight of the women trapped in it. Julie Bindel http://www.guardian.co.uk/lifeandstyle/2008/sep/10/women.socialexclusion

  24. Friday 3 October 2008 Big Brothel research 'seriously flawed' Poppy Project research into sex workers "was based on flawed data" and "cannot be substantiated“ AntheaLipsett http://www.guardian.co.uk/education/2008/oct/03/research.women

  25. AN ACADEMIC RESPONSE TO “BIG BROTHEL” Dr Teela Sanders, University of Leeds , Jane Pitcher, Independent Researcher, Rosie Campbell, Chair, UK Network of Sex Work Projects & Loughborough University , Dr Belinda Brooks-Gordon, Birbeck College, University of London , Dr Maggie O’Neill, Loughborough University, Dr Jo Phoenix, Durham University, Professor Phil Hubbard, Loughborough University, Mary Whowell, Loughborough University, Dr Nick Mai, London Metropolitan University, Dr Linda Cusick, University of the West of Scotland ,Dr Tracey Sagar, Swansea University , Kate Hardy, Queen Mary, University of London , Dr Ron Roberts, Kingston University, Jane Scoular, Strathclyde University, Professor Graham Scambler, University College London , Hilary Kinnell, Author, “Violence & Sex Work in Britain” (2008), Dr Petra Boynton, University College London , Justin Gaffney, Clinical Specialist, Sohoboyz , Dr Elizabeth Wood, Nassau Community College , Dr Michael Goodyear, Dalhousie University, Professor Ron Weitzer, George Washington University, Dr Jackie West, Bristol University, Dr Helen Self, Author “Prostitution, Women & Misuse of the Law” (2003), Dr Hera Cook, University of Birmingham, Dr Sophie Day, Goldsmiths College, London, Dr Helen Ward, Imperial College, London, Tiggey May, Institute for Criminal Policy Research, King's College, London http://sexinthepublicsquare.org/files/u1/AcademicResponseBigBrothelSept2008.pdf

  26. Researchers’ responsibilitiesEthical principle III • Beneficence • Research must benefit the subjects of research Mill JS: Utilitarianism (1863)

  27. Issues in Research Design • Participation of the community is key Nothing About Us Without Us

  28. International Conference on ProstitutionLos Angeles, 1997 Recommendations on Research Ethics South Australian Sex Industry Network* • Collaboration • Equality • Dissemination • Independence *Wahab and Sloan: Ethical dilemmas in sex work research. Research for Sex Work (7) 2004

  29. 1. Collaboration Researchers must collaborate with the sex workers they seek to study This collaboration must include all aspects of research design, theoretical framework, methods, and dissemination As cited In: Wahab and Sloan: Ethical dilemmas in sex work research. Research for Sex Work (7) 2004

  30. 2. Equality Researchers must be cognisant of issues of social, political, economic and personal power and seek to equalise power relationships with the sex workers they study This can be accomplished by acknowledging that sex workers are the experts on their own lives; researchers are the experts on research methods, and we all stand to learn from one another As cited In: Wahab and Sloan: Ethical dilemmas in sex work research. Research for Sex Work (7) 2004

  31. 3. Dissemination Researchers must bring the results back to the sex workers they study to ensure that the researchers’ interpretation of the data is accurate As cited In: Wahab and Sloan: Ethical dilemmas in sex work research. Research for Sex Work (7) 2004

  32. 4. Independence Sex workers and sex work organisations are encouraged to hire their own researchers to conduct research of relevance to sex workers. Or, sex workers and sex work organisations are encouraged to obtain training or consultation that would enable them to conduct their own research. As cited In: Wahab and Sloan: Ethical dilemmas in sex work research. Research for Sex Work (7) 2004

  33. Collaboration requires trust • Work with community based organizations • Learn their needs • Demonstrate your own commitment • Be willing to commit significant time and effort • (NOTE: This is not simply about entrée)

  34. Collaboration requires trust • Read sex worker blogs and comment where appropriate. • By listening you learn the language and the issues • By commenting • reveal your perspective and your willingness to learn • reveal what you have to offer

  35. Collaborative Models

  36. Participatory Action Research WALSALL PROSTITUTION CONSULTATION RESEARCH (UK) O’Neill and Campbell 2004 http://www.safetysoapbox.co.uk/full_report.htm

  37. MAKA Project(Vancouver, BC) In the fall of 2004, the MAKA Project, a partnership with the BC Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS, undertook a study to assess the health needs of the women who use the Drop-In Centre at WISH. http://www.wish-vancouver.net/index.cfm?go=site.index&section=programs&page=maka

  38. Non-malevolence(do no harm)Ethical principle IV • Anticipating potential harm (“Think harm”) • Stigmatisation • Outing • Use of research for other purposes (Utilitarianism)

  39. Taxonomy – Avoiding conflation • Highly stratified activity • Overlapping categories • Generalisations • Terminology e.g. Sex Worker • Definitions • Categories • Identity

  40. Using an umbrella term to refer to a subcategory • Conflating iv drug use and sex work • Unintended results of research : McInnes et al 2009 http://www.vancouversun.com/news/1354034/story.html

  41. HIV/AIDS in Vancouver, British Columbia: a growing epidemic McInnes CW, Druyts E, Harvard SS, Gilbert M, Tyndall MW, Lima VD, Wood E, Montaner JS, Hogg RS. Harm Reduct J. 2009 Mar 5;6:5 The study referred to in previous alarming headline – the focus was NOT sex work - see also: Readers’ Comments, for example of responding to potentially misleading research http://www.harmreductionjournal.com/content/6/1/5

  42. Essentialism (Ontology) • Confusing behaviour with identity • “I am not my job” • Evidence vs Belief • Defining subject of research

  43. Barriers to research How do barriers shape nature of research? • Funding • Research ethics oversight • Confidentiality • Safety • Consent • Bringing issues to IRBs • Alternative models: community-academic partnership (eg CARAS) • Attacks on researchers

  44. Dissemination • Who owns the data? • Community rights to access • Data • Interpretation • Communication strategy • Whose interests? • Subjects • Broader community Necessary a priori design elements, addressed by collaborative model

  45. Media • Media training • Journalistic ethics • Media agenda • Soundbites • Avoiding nuance • Clear message • Getting feedback

  46. Learning from Sex Workers: Media Training Sex Work Awareness designed a media training workshop, Speak Up!, for sex workers and has made those materials available online http://www.sexworkawareness.org/speak-up-media-training-materials

  47. Responsiveness Researchers build trust when they actively respond to other people’s research: • Positioning studies and reports • Critical appraisal • Addressing implications for community • Responding at multiple levels: academic, mainstream press, blogs/websites, social media.

  48. Sex In The Public Square post about the feminist academic response to Big Brothel

  49. Questions for Discussion I • Researchers agenda & responsibilities • Community agenda & responsibilities • Considerations • Beneficence • Engagement • Collaboration

  50. Questions for Discussion II • Managing conflicting values • Duty to subjects v society • Researchers v Subjects interests • Applied v Theoretical research • Concept of expert (researcher, subject)

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