Challenging Heteronormativity : Practice, Activism and Impact

News of a fascinating conference in a couple of weeks time at Brunel from Fin Cullen.

 

I hope you may be interested in this forthcoming event CYWS & BGSRC to explore youth and LGBTQ issues.

CHALLENGING HETERONORMATIVITY : PRACTICE, ACTIVISM & IMPACT
Bridging policy, practice and research


May 14, 2013 from 1:30-5:30pm• Mary Seacole building, BRUNEL UNIVERSITY, UXBRIDGE

Michael Barron (Belongto)
Prof Ian Rivers (Brunel)
Jay Stewart (Gendered Intelligence)
Amelia Lee (LGBT YOUTH NW /Schools OUT)

Mark International Day Against Homophobia & Transphobia at a half day event exploring how activists, youth practitioners and academics can work together in combating homophobia and challenging heteronormativity in work with young people.


Though presentations and discussion the seminar explores:

What lessons can be learnt from activism/practice?
How might youth research and theory on LGBTQ issues be used to challenge gender/ sexual inequalities in schools, colleges, youth settings and beyond?
What are the new areas of research collaboration where academics and activists can work together?
What are the opportunities and challenges in influencing policymakers on LGBTQ youth issues?

ALL WELCOME. For more details email Fin Cullen (Fiona.cullen@brunel.ac.uk)

The day will start at 1:30pm on 14th May. The eventbrite to book a place is here:
http://challenging-heteronormativity.eventbrite.com/?ref=estw

The poster is here:

https://www.dropbox.com/s/eacfhe5lijklaws/cywsbrunel%20%20lgbt%20event.pdf

Please get in touch with any queries. Many thanks again in advance.
Warmest regards,
Fin

 

What is heteronormativity?

What is heteronormativity?Heteronormativity is a term used by social theorists in order to discuss the way in which gender and sexuality are separated into hierarchically organised categories. It has become one of the most important ways of thinking about sexuality within the academic study of sexuality. Theoristshave argued that a discourse or technique of heteronormativity has been set up, and subsequently dominates, social institutions such as the family, the state and education.Heteronormative discursive practices or techniques are multiple and organise categories of identity into hierarchical binaries. This means that man has been set up as the opposite (and superior) of woman, and heterosexual as the opposite (and superior) of homosexual. It is through heteronormative discursive practices that lesbian and gay lives are marginalised socially and politically and, as a result, can be invisible within social spaces such as schools.

Theorists have become interested more recently with bisexual, transgender and intersex lives. If one is able to exist between gender and sexual categories of identity, then one provides a counter argument to the idea that gender and sexuality are fixed and/or natural human characteristics and provide a way to challenge or ‘queer’ our understandings of these categories. Bisexual and transgender identities are able to be read in this way because law, science and education often talk about gender and sexuality as fixed, immovable and pre-ordained human characteristics that fit into either oppositional group (male/female and gay/straight). Political rhetoric also often follows this script. The idea that people can live in a different gender to the one they were born into, or refuse to identify as either male or female, or that people can have intimate sexual relationships with men and women and reject the gay or straight classification, demands that we re-think the way we understand gender and sexuality, what they mean and what they are and can be.

Emily Gray

Taken from Gender and Education Association

 

A Framework of Ethics : Useful or Ornamental?

The basis for today’s would-be Institute of Youth Work meeting in London is the following document circulated by the NYA in March.

IYW proposal 3 of 4 – ethical framework march 13

We will be represented and our steering group has put together the following initial response.

IN DEFENCE OF YOUTH WORK CAMPAIGN

INITIAL RESPONSE TO THE ETHICAL FRAMEWORK DEBATE

We are conscious of time limitations re the discussion on April 25, 2013 so we will content ourselves with expressing four areas of concern.

  1. At the heart of the debate remains the question of defining youth work. The NYA paper continues to fudge the issue. It seeks to retain definitions, which stress the voluntary and young person-led character of the work, whilst referring to a commissioned NCVYS paper, A Narrative for Youth Work, which explicitly calls for an acceptance of the imposition of prescribed outcomes on the youth work relationship and process. Meanwhile in the field many youth workers are all but youth social or youth justice workers in name.

  1. A renewed engagement with Ethics demands that we talk Politics. To take but one glaring example from the 2004 Statement on Ethical Conduct, social justice is first and foremost a political rather than an ethical concept. The struggle for social justice is fundamentally a collective project. Indeed this is partly acknowledged in the background notes which talk of actively seeking to change unjust policies and practice. Unfortunately there is a gulf between rhetoric and practice here, which cannot be ignored. Over the last couple of years a large number of workers have been warned under threat of discipline not to get involved in campaigns against unjust social policy – with or without young people.

  1. This observation leads us to the possible Code for Employers, which is to be welcomed. However for now we will register concern about a future in which workers bound to the IYW’s code of conduct are employed by agencies, who refuse to be part of the overall deal. More immediately a management commitment to staff development, to the encouragement of critical internal debate has in the main been conspicuous by its absence. In this context too we note another contradiction that this discussion about an Ethical Framework with its focus on professional guidelines is taking place within a culture of profound mistrust with regard to worker/professional autonomy. Indeed we suggest that the managerial fixation upon predetermined outcomes is the antithesis of the youth work tradition of improvised young person-centred practice. It is at odds with the very notion of the distinctive, trained youth work professional, be they paid or voluntary.

  1. Our final point is perhaps obvious. The shift from Ethical Guidelines to an Ethical Code is highly significant, even contentious. Ethics can be a minefield of differing interpretation. The danger with moving to a Code is that it suggests, even if this is strenuously denied, the possibility of generally agreed ethical judgements on, say, what constitutes ‘clear evidence of danger’ or ‘the nature and limits of confidentiality’ or indeed appropriate behaviour outside work. Inevitably this caution is heightened if the Code is to be used as a regulatory mechanism to decide who is fit to be a youth worker. All manner of issues are thrown up. For example, can an individual member of IYW charge another with unethical conduct? At the very least we are obliged to unravel the present formulations with a great deal of care.

In the light of this final expression of concern we think that a pluralist Ethics Working Group should be set up to take things further. If possible the next draft of a Framework should be less sprawling than the present version on the table.

The IDYW Steering Group

Remembering Our Histories : Memories of an Inner City Project

 

Back in January we reported on the National Trust’s decision to close its Inner City Project in Newcastle. Sadly the moment is imminent. However Alyssa Cowell informs us.

The Inner City Project closes after 25 years on 14th May – I’ve started to pull together old photographs and testimonials from both the young and older people who accessed over the years. The site  shows (to me) how the lessons we learn as part of a youth group can last for years.

 

There is now an impressive site, Memories of the Inner City Project, where the history from 1987 – 2013 is being brought to life. One such offering is this moving poem in memory of Ian Johnson 1980 – 1998, written by the East end Trailblazers Youth Group.

We looked at you and saw a friend
Who’s golden world could never end
But don’t believe that’s all there was to prove
We’ll never know the real you.

You smiled through a thousand tears
And harboured adolescent fears
You dreamed of all that you could never be
And waded in insecurity.

We won’t say you took it all for granted
We were aware of all you had
We don’t think you were disenchanted
But we understand.

It seems as though we’ve always been
People on the outside looking in
Well here we are for all them to bleed
And no-one can bring us to our knees
And though we knew you through and through
We’ll never know the real you.

Spending time with this host of memories from the young and old involved with the project poses the question of how well in general we have preserved our histories. Sadly much valuable material will have been discarded and lost. It would be brilliant to hear from other clubs and projects, who have managed to preserve the past in the service of the present and future.

IDYW April Steering Group Notes, Membership and finances

Looking ahead we remain concerned that our activities are as transparent as possible. To this end find below the notes of the recent  IDYW Steering Group plus the names of the members as at present plus a financial statement. We are still intending to test out with supporters a simple constitution by the IDYW event in London on June 19.

 

Notes of the IN DEFENCE OF YOUTH WORK steering group meeting, April 9

1.0 Feed back from the March national conference, Leeds

  • Agreed that it had been very positive.

  • Agreed that we should liaise with Youth and Policy regarding their plans for the future as there was a genuine synergy between our two conferences.

  • Agreed that Sue Atkins be encouraged to write up her excellent contribution at Youth and Policy to the trade union symposium.

2.0 Choose Youth, April 11 meeting.

  • Agreed that Sue Atkins and Pauline Grace, who are attending should question the notion that the Choose Youth AGM formally adopted the manifesto. In fact the manifesto was never put to a vote in order to maintain a working consensus within the alliance. From our point of view the manifesto was seen as a work in progress, which CYWUU/UNITE in particular want to use to influence Labour Party policy. In the aftermath we have circulated the manifesto at the Leeds conferences.

  • Agreed that we would pursue our belief that what is needed is an open and pluralist dialogue across the youth sector. Sue and Pauline to propose a working group meeting in the afternoon of April 24 in London.

3.0 The Newcastle situation.

Inevitably, the momentum has slowed following the major rally and at this point people are reflecting on the next step. We have no further news on the campaign to support Don McDonald following his arrest.

4.0 The Unison launch of its young people strategy, April 24.

Sue Atkins and Malcolm Ball will be attending on behalf of the campaign.

5.0 The Institute of Youth Work – the ethics meetings, April 11 and 25th.

  • Our cautious response to the NYA overture to back the Institute was approved.

  • Sue Atkins and Malcolm Ball will be attending the April 25 meeting on ethics. As things stand no preparatory papers have been received. If possible, Tony Taylor to produce a brief paper focused on social justice as fundamentally political rather than an ethical question.

  • It will be interesting to see how the union response unfolds. Whilst the JNC staff side seem opposed, an article in Rapport softens the line, arguing for the potential of the Institute as a regulatory body.

6.0 The make-up of our steering group, constitution and democracy.

Agreed that the names of the new steering group should be published on the site; that further work be done on a simple constitution, and that we continue the experiment of using surveys to gauge opinion. Noted and welcomed that Paula Connaughton has now joined the steering group.

7.0. The second wave of Stories Workshops.

  • The Plymouth workshop is organised for early May, whilst negotiations are continuing with possibilities in Wales, Scotland, Ireland and Sheffield.

  • We are pursuing with Limerick via Tania and Youth Voice a bid for European money to fund training with young youth workers around storytelling as a method of evaluation.

  • An embryo idea re collecting young people’s stories is to be further explored.

8.0 European developments.

Pauline Grace will continue to monitor developments on our behalf. Sadly the POYWE project has been stalled by a tragic accident to one of its key figures. We will continue to do our best to support this initiative. Pauline has also contributed to a conference in Lithuania on youth work and participatory research.

9.0 Dana Fusco, London event, June 19th

We need to confirm the venue – possibly the UNISON centre for an afternoon event. In terms of attracting students might we use the TAG newsletter.

10.0 Manchester University youth and community celebration event.

Bernard and Tania are liaising re an IDYW contribution.

11.0 Demand the Impossible, Leeds

Agreed that Diane Law and Graham Tiffany be approached to liaise with Ben Fraser, who is involved in this grass-roots initiative.

12.0 Politics and Ethics Autumn event.

Agreed that we should look to organise this event for the week beginning November 4th in Birmingham. We should check with Howard Sercombe and Sarah Banks as to their availability.

13.0 The Illusion of Outcomes

Agreed that Tony Taylor should prioritise finishing his paper as a stimulus to debate. Suggested that we think of organising a road-show of events, starting in Manchester in mid-June. Tony and Bernard Davies to pursue.

14.0 Curating for youthpolicy.org

Reported that the London/South-East group is taking responsibility for curating a page on youth and community work for the youthpolicy.org web site. More details to follow.

STEERING GROUP MEMBERS 2012/2013

Sue Atkins, Malcolm Ball, Andy Brown, Paula Connaughton, Tania de St Croix, Bernard Davies, Pauline Grace, Susanna Hunter-Darch, Diane Law, Don MacDonald, Ann Marron, Chris Ward with Tony Taylor as co-ordinator.

In defence income and expenditure account

Lads will be Lads in Higher Education and even Youth Work? What’s the Score?

A few weeks ago at the Youth and Policy History conference I offered a workshop, in which I revisited critically an article, ‘Working with Young Males : Towards an Anti-Sexist Practice’, written in 1981.  At heart it was a response to the remarkable flowering of feminist youth work at that time and the questions this posed for work with the lads. We had a stimulating discussion about the paper’s strengths and weaknesses, its absences and silences. In the end we agreed that the discussion needed to continue, but that it needed to be more firmly grounded in current practice.

Anti-Sexism conference 1980!

As I’ve been pondering the next step an interesting piece of research has recently emerged, entitled ‘That’s what she said : Women students’ experiences of ‘lad culture’ in higher education’. It opens by stating:

It seems that ‘lad culture’ is suddenly everywhere in
higher education. ‘Banter’ on social media; student
nights at the local club; initiations to join a sports
team – all seem influenced by an element of ‘lad
culture’. For many, this seems an unproblematic trend,
just a new way of structuring and understanding the
way students have fun. But there have also been
worrying accounts, particularly from women students,
about the negative impact and harm that ‘lad culture’
is having on their educational experiences and indeed
their lives more broadly.

Credit to sotontab.co.uk

For the moment I wonder if you might look at this research and see if it has any resonance with the world of youth work today. An early section attempts to define ‘lad culture’.

Described as founded upon a trinity of ‘drinking, football
and fucking’, contemporary ‘laddism’ can be seen as
young, hedonistic and largely centred on homosocial
bonding. This often consists of ‘having a laugh’,
objectifying women and espousing politically incorrect
views. It has been linked with the phenomenon of
‘raunch culture’, which has been theorised as an oversexualised
cultural form based on men objectifying
women and encouraging them to objectify themselves,
and which is associated with the mainstreaming of the
erotic industries and the normalisation of sexual
violence. ‘Laddism’ is also thought to be currently
gaining a great deal of social and cultural power, and
has been described as the template of masculinity for
contemporary young British males.

Read in full – That’s what she said report Final web pdf

For a contrary view Spiked accuses the National Union of Students of leading a ‘prissy war on ‘lad culture’.

This research is hardly neutral. The NUS commissioned academics from the Centre for Gender Studies at the University of Sussex carry it out, among focus groups of 40 female students from across Britain. The report admits that ‘our findings cannot be classified as representative’, since most interviews were with middle-class ‘white, British undergraduates’. More strikingly, 76 per cent of respondents classified themselves as feminists. Contrast that to a recent survey that found only eight per cent of British women aged 20 to 24 called themselves feminists. This is straightforward advocacy research, designed to boost with a phony evidence base a prejudice that already exists among student leaders.

Any thoughts on the validity of the research and more broadly whether you think we should organise a future IDYW event looking afresh at work with young men would be much appreciated.

 


 

Irony of ironies! In death and in ignorance Thatcher chooses a verse from John Bunyan, the radical dissident

On the day of ‘conviction politician’ Margaret Thatcher’s quasi-state funeral with all its pomp and pretence, Doug Nicholls reminds us of the life of a ‘tinker and poor man’, who spent years behind bars for his radical conviction and belief in the common good.

 

 

Thatcher’s choice of a verse from John Bunyan at her funeral is one of those great ironies of British history.

That a former prime minister, so unlettered and uncouth, would choose words from a poor itinerant tinker and preacher who in fact inspired the early trade union movement is a testament to the comical ignorance of right-wing politicians.

We may be used to hearing the Women’s Institute and the Proms belting out William Blake’s great poem Jerusalem and smiling to ourselves at the blissful ignorance of those, so tearful with their warm and comforting jingoism and English cuddliness, as they sing one of the great songs of socialism.

But Bunyan at Thatcher’s funeral takes the biscuit.

Thatcher perhaps associated Bunyan with strong determination and the successful struggle against all odds.

No doubt she saw in him the implacable conviction she liked to demonstrate herself.

The fact is that he exercised and expressed such virtues only to motivate an ideology linked to the early formulation of socialist and, indeed, revolutionary thinking.

His 70 books and pamphlets speak of relentless struggles against injustice, tyranny and the mind-forged manacles that bind individuals to an oppressive system.

The Nonconformist Protestant tradition of which Bunyan was a key and leading part was a radical one and Bunyan fought on the parliamentary side in the civil war.

This irony should not be lost on us either as Thatcher was the first prime minister in the postwar period to largely override parliamentary democracy.

Her signing of the European Act, for example, removed Britain’s sovereignty and no amount of her whining about the Common Agricultural Policy and rebates and so on could conceal the fact that it was her government that put the EU in control of Britain’s political economy and above its Parliament.

Bunyan wrote during the time of the first republican commonwealth, which he supported. And he was imprisoned after its collapse for preaching without a Church of England licence.

He fixed pots and pans and made shoe laces to keep his impoverished family together. He was a popular preacher of a radical, class-conscious gospel.

Christian, the hero of Pilgrim’s Progress, identifies his enemies as “the Lord Luxurious, the Lord desire of Vain Glory, my old Lord Lechery, Sir Having Good, with the rest of our nobility.”

A monster called Apollyon symbolises the state that stands in the way of human happiness and punishes dissent.

 

Bunyan repeatedly scorns the politics of accommodation and compromise with this state. He feared that the incorruptible inheritance of the progressive spirit would be ruined by the politics of defeatism and compromise.

Bunyan reminds us often that the everyday acts of goodness among working people and against exploitation wear out the rulers.

“… by small

Accomplish great things, by things deemed weak

Subverting worldly strong, and worldly wise

By simply meek.”

After his death, as the first working class in Britain grew and developed independently, Bunyan’s works of struggle against adversity and exploitation struck a chord and Pilgrim’s Progress became the most widely read book after the Bible.

It was especially loved by the first organised trade unionists and campaigners for political reform and extension of the franchise.

In short, Bunyan expressed the radical tradition of the English revolution, the Good Old Cause as it was sometimes called, and preserved it in terms that motivated the radicals of the industrial revolution period.

Bunyan was a gentle man. In his autobiographical work Grace Abounding he wrestles with his sense of personal sinfulness and it turns out that his worst excesses were no more than profanity, dancing and bell-ringing.

These are hardly sins by today’s standards and the bell-ringing, ecstatic dancing and rightly abusive language that hard-working people will share today will be a fitting send off to a monster that Bunyan’s Christian would have slain.

  • Doug Nicholls is Chair of the Chooseyouth campaign.
  • Three great socialist historians have written excellent works on Bunyan: Jack Lindsay (John Bunyan, Maker of Myths, 1937), Christopher Hill, (A Tinker and a Poor Man, John Bunyan and his Church 1628-1688, 1969) and EP Thompson (The Making of the English Working Class, 1963).

Thatcherism and Youth Work – Privatising the Public, Marketising the Practice

“Where there is discord, may we bring harmony.
Where there is error, may we bring truth.
Where there is doubt, may we bring faith.
And where there is despair, may we bring hope.”
Margaret Thatcher quoting St Francis of Assisi, Downing Street, 5 May 1979

Deafened by the cacophony of the coverage it is tempting to ignore the demise of Margaret Thatcher. However to do so would be historically negligent. I believe that her legacy threatens ultimately the survival of youth work as defined by our campaign.

By way of introduction though a couple of immediate recollections fired by the news of her death. Back in the early days of her reign we fought back against the Manpower Service Commission’s effort to colonise youth work. Informed by two National Youth Bureau pamphlets by Bernard Davies, ‘In Whose Interests?’ [1979] and ‘The State We’re In’ [1981], led by the Community and Youth Workers Union, we resisted the attempt to undermine the philosophy of our work, to shift us from offering social education to delivering social and life skills training.  For example in Leicestershire we boycotted the Community Programme as a cheap way of providing youth work, whilst we subverted the Youth Opportunities Programme by turning a City and Guilds 926 course into a radical youth work training experience for its supervisors.  The clash ended in a truce, which in retrospect was a small victory. In passing we might ponder whether the National Youth Bureau’s successor, the National Youth Agency, would feel able today to publish cutting critiques of government policy, similar to those of Bernard from nearly 35 years ago.

Thatcher, though, contemptuous about ‘soft-bellied’, liberal youth workers, had eyes only for a ‘macho’ confrontation with the National Union of Mineworkers, By twist of fate I worked in both the Leicestershire and Derbyshire coalfields across the turbulent year of 1984/85 and found myself, amongst many others, in the midst of the conflict. In both cases the assault was fundamentally ideological and political rather than economic. Its primary aim was to smash notions of solidarity and collectivity, of putting the social before the individual. Hers was a dangerous strategy, fraught with contradiction. In Leicestershire activists, including many youth and community workers, rallied to create a vibrant Miners’ Support Group backing the ‘Dirty Thirty’ minority of miners on strike. In Derbyshire the dispute was solid with miners’ wives to the fore.  However Thatcher deployed the full force of State violence in concert with an orchestrated campaign of propaganda in the media to take on the mining communities. I well remember that going to work via Bolsover, home of Denis Skinner, the left-wing Labour MP, to Shirebrook, the quintessential pit village, was akin to a journey into Occupied Territory.  Being stopped at a road block and interrogated by the Metropolitan Police as to my intentions was a regular occurrence. In the aftermath of the strike the abandoned village primary school, which had been the miners’ food distribution centre, was renovated by the County Council to become the Shirebrook Women’s Centre. Genuine though this development was – I was proud to have my office situated therein – it was ultimately a symbolic gesture. Thatcherism, vampire-like, had torn the heart out of this and many other communities. Bypassed they have never regained their full health.

Moving on, getting on for thirty years later, it’s no surprise that in my conversations with students and younger youth workers the struggles touched on above often possess little resonance. The harsh reality is that the neo-liberal project, the first figure-head of which was Thatcher, has altered the political landscape dramatically. Its goals continue to be the privatisation of individual life and the privatisation of all services. It detests with a vengeance a notion of the common good. Like it or not the neo-liberals, including New Labour, have made great strides in bringing this about – so much so that the present social arrangements seem to be the natural order of things. Indeed we might wonder if Michael Gove might restore the following verse to the hymn, ‘All Things Bright and Beautiful’, banned by the Inner London Education authority in 1982.

The rich man in his castle,
The poor man at his gate,
God made them, high or lowly,
And ordered their estate.

Thatcherism was never going to be too keen on an educational practice that sought to promote association and critical conversation ; that actively sought to grapple with issues around gender, race, sexuality and disability. It is to our credit that we staved off efforts to change our outlook till well into the 1990′s. However the last two decades have seen the insidious erosion of both our much lauded values and the distinctive essence of our practice, its voluntary character. This has been achieved via the imposition of the discourse of business and the market upon our work with young people.  The decimation of youth work as a public service and the marketisation of our practice are indeed a legacy of Thatcherism, She would have welcomed the turn to building neo-liberal ‘good’ character as defined in the much-touted Framework of Outcomes with Young People. She would have loved the world of bright-eyed, upwardly aspiring Young Entrepreneurs. She would have loathed young people at the gate, who do not know their place.

Perhaps the greatest success of Thatcherism and neo-liberalism has been to induce such a high degree of political passivity amongst the population, including many a youth worker. Of course they have not quelled us utterly. In recent times we have seen the Choose Youth campaign fighting to save services. Most recently young people and workers across the community have been on the streets in Newcastle and Birmingham. But it’s tough and sometimes disheartening. The truth is that not enough of us are throwing off the chains of compliance to the status quo.

If we are to mark Thatcher’s funeral in positive way for ourselves, perhaps we can promise each other that we will meet at least once a fortnight to begin talking about and questioning what’s going on, finding ways of being creative and unpredictable.  And from there, who’s to know? What’s certain is that we need one another if we are to turn back Thatcher’s tide. Renewing our collective spirit would be a fitting response to the death of an authoritarian foe, who knew absolutely ‘which side she was on’.

—————————————————————————————————————————-

For an antidote to the mainstream sycophancy this sweeping and informed piece is well worth a read.

SWAN 2013 Conference : Defeating the Politics of Austerity : Creating an Alternative Future

 

Over the past four years we have had an organised presence at the annual conference of the Social Work Action Network [SWAN]. Sadly this year is the exception. Given our slender resources we have been unable to make a useful contribution to this year’s event. This is all the more frustrating, given the theme and the rich  content. However there may be a few places left and we would encourage our supporters to register even at this late stage.

SWAN Conference 2013 ‘Defeating the politics of austerity: creating an alternative future’, takes place on Friday 12th and Saturday 13th April at London South Bank University, Elephant & Castle, London.

SWAN London, hosting the event, feel the onslaught of austerity, marketisation and privatisation is even further progressed than when SWAN was established in 2004. As social workers, social care workers, services users, carers, social work students and educators it is an alternative through critical thinking, radical practice and social action which we want to develop and help manifest at this conference.

There is a diverse and compelling line up of speakers including Owen Jones (Journalist and author of ‘Chavs: the Demonization of the Working Class’), Selma James (Socialist and Feminist, Global Women’s Strike) plus representatives from Disabled People Against Cuts.
Booking for the conference is a two part process. Register here and make payment here!

Our latest response to the Institute of Youth Work debate

Further to the request from the NYA to consider different forms of support for the proposed Institute of Youth Work – see NYA asks for our backing – we have sent the following response.
Dear Maralyn,

Further to your request for partners to back in kind the IYW project we need to make the following observations. These flow from Steering Group discussions and our first tentative attempt to use SurveyMonkey to gauge opinion amongst our supporters.

1. Our campaign is utterly committed to the process of establishing whether the creation of an IYW is in the best interests of youth work and young people.

2. Thus we wish to facilitate the fullest possible debate about the proposed Institute. In this context a link on our home page to IYW pages would not be a problem. We are not quite sure what you mean by ‘advertorial or editorial’ column space, but of necessity wish to give the widest airing to material produced by the NYA about the IYW throughout the process.

3. As an independent, voluntary group with no external funding or staff we are unable to respond on the financial front. Indeed this request touching on such issues as pay-roll deductions seems somewhat premature, along with the suggestion that partners via senior management should be recommending the Institute.

All this aside we look forward to a continuing engagement with the unfolding process, confident that this holds out the best possibility of a measured and educated decision about the future of an IYW.

Best Wishes

As we understand it the JNC staff side remain opposed to the establishment of an IYW, seeing it as a threat to very JNC structure itself. However in a piece in the April edition of Rapport, Ben Cochrane, the newly elected Youth Work Convenor asks of the possible Institute.

Was it there to advocate or regulate? Unite maintains that it can, and should do
both. Given the diversity of bodies already committed to advocating on behalf of youth work and youth workers (trades unions, In Defence of Youth Work, NYA, CHYPS and TAG amongst others) the niche position for an IYW could be found in the latter role.
Given that as things stand anybody can call themselves a Youth Worker, open a
youth club and begin working with young people without any checks or quality
assurance measures whatsoever, the proposed development of a professional
body such as the IYW presents a golden opportunity to bring in some degree of
regulation and safeguards. The technical, ethical and practical detailsof how a regulatory body may function are clearly a source of contention. Debates around an inclusive or exclusive membership of such a body are complex
with valid concerns on both sides. Unite’s policy is that we should continue to
explore the development of an IYW and remain critical friends of the process.
I believe this is the correct position while the door remains open to introduce some form of regulated membership, possibly based on a code of ethical practice, and we are still able to argue the case for a revocable licence to practice and protection of the title Youth Worker within that context.

In this context both UNITE and our Campaign are in agreement about being a critical friend to the process. However across the diversity of our supporters the question of IYW as a regulatory body based on an interpretation of what constitutes ethical practice is seen by more than a few as deeply problematic.

The case for A Real Democracy : A World to Win e-reader

A challenging read for the weekend!

A contribution to the campaign for an Agreement of the People
for the 21st century

A World to Win’s editorial team has brought together a selection of our blogs on the crisis of democracy and the state, as a contribution to the growing discussion on a way forward. We do not accept that liberal or representative democracy is the last word on the subject. That is why we are supporting the initiative around the Agreement of the People for the 21st century.

Borrowing its name from the heroic efforts of the Levellers’ movement, the Agreement project aims to build on past democratic achievements through achieving a new constitution. What kind of political and government system should replace the present one is just as important. Our contribution to this discussion is to present the case for People’s Assemblies as a possible way forward.

Free download here