Social Work Manifesto on HIV/AIDS
On July 29, 2000 the Canadian Association of Social Workers sponsored a one-day symposium on HIV/AIDS in conjunction with the International Federation of Social Workers and the International Association of Schools of Social Work Conference in Montreal, Canada. The symposium involved social workers from 32 countries and its purpose was to create a call to action for social workers and social work educators around the world regarding HIV/AIDS. The result is this Manifesto.
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Preamble
As we enter the third decade of the HIV/AIDS pandemic, social workers deplore the fact that millions of people are infected with HIV/AIDS and that not enough is being done to promote wellness and to stop the spread of this preventable disease.
AIDS knows no social, racial or cultural barriers. Yet the rates of infection spiral especially among the poor, the disenfranchised and among people who struggle with inequality and oppression.
Throughout the pandemic, people living with HIV/AIDS across the world have shown, and continue to show, a commitment to community-based action. They have not acted alone. Often social workers have provided essential leadership and support in mobilising community response to HIV/AIDS. Together they have shown an unbending resolve to work toward wellness, to openly engage the communities, and to assert and protect fundamental rights. This action is a potent reminder of the duty of compassion that binds us all.
Social workers are committed to the principles of social justice. We have a "responsibility to devote objective and disciplined knowledge and skills to aid individuals, groups, communities and societies in their development and resolution of personal-societal conflict". The principles of the profession explicitly provide that we work without prejudice with regard to gender, age, disability, colour, social class, race, religion, language, political beliefs or sexual orientation. Likewise, we must be mindful and aware of the impact of oppression and marginalization with regard to gender, age, disability, colour, social class, race, religion, language, political beliefs or sexual orientation. We are obligated to uphold stringently the principles of privacy, confidentiality and responsible use of information even when a country's legislation is in conflict with this demand. Work we undertake must be consistent with these fundamental values and nowhere may we be complicit in supporting individuals, groups, political forces or power structures that suppress their fellow human beings by terrorism, torture or other brutal means.
Through its pervasive and global scope, AIDS presents different challenges wherever it arises. In the interest of preventing further spread of HIV/AIDS and promoting health, our approach assumes a continuum of care — sexual and psycho-social health education, adequate testing, prophylactic means of prevention, counselling, support, care and treatment.
This Manifesto is a call to action to social workers and social work educators everywhere to walk the critical paths that demand our attention, whether on the local, national or international level. From the most basic duty to advocate fundamental rights, through lobbying for effective and compassionate social and health policy, to advocating just and equitable protocols for research and collaboration, there is much work to be done. Human rights, social work education, social and health policy, research and partnerships — all relate one to the other. May this provide a catalyst to greater action and a standard against which we can measure ourselves.
We, professional social workers and social work educators, meeting this July 29th, 2000 in Montreal, Qc., Canada, at the Canadian Association of Social Worker’s HIV/AIDS Symposium held in conjunction with the Joint Conference of the International Federation of Social Workers and the International Association of Schools of Social Work.
AIDS knows no social, racial or cultural barriers. Yet the rates of infection spiral especially among the poor, the disenfranchised and among people who struggle with inequality and oppression.
Throughout the pandemic, people living with HIV/AIDS across the world have shown, and continue to show, a commitment to community-based action. They have not acted alone. Often social workers have provided essential leadership and support in mobilising community response to HIV/AIDS. Together they have shown an unbending resolve to work toward wellness, to openly engage the communities, and to assert and protect fundamental rights. This action is a potent reminder of the duty of compassion that binds us all.
Social workers are committed to the principles of social justice. We have a "responsibility to devote objective and disciplined knowledge and skills to aid individuals, groups, communities and societies in their development and resolution of personal-societal conflict". The principles of the profession explicitly provide that we work without prejudice with regard to gender, age, disability, colour, social class, race, religion, language, political beliefs or sexual orientation. Likewise, we must be mindful and aware of the impact of oppression and marginalization with regard to gender, age, disability, colour, social class, race, religion, language, political beliefs or sexual orientation. We are obligated to uphold stringently the principles of privacy, confidentiality and responsible use of information even when a country's legislation is in conflict with this demand. Work we undertake must be consistent with these fundamental values and nowhere may we be complicit in supporting individuals, groups, political forces or power structures that suppress their fellow human beings by terrorism, torture or other brutal means.
Through its pervasive and global scope, AIDS presents different challenges wherever it arises. In the interest of preventing further spread of HIV/AIDS and promoting health, our approach assumes a continuum of care — sexual and psycho-social health education, adequate testing, prophylactic means of prevention, counselling, support, care and treatment.
This Manifesto is a call to action to social workers and social work educators everywhere to walk the critical paths that demand our attention, whether on the local, national or international level. From the most basic duty to advocate fundamental rights, through lobbying for effective and compassionate social and health policy, to advocating just and equitable protocols for research and collaboration, there is much work to be done. Human rights, social work education, social and health policy, research and partnerships — all relate one to the other. May this provide a catalyst to greater action and a standard against which we can measure ourselves.
We, professional social workers and social work educators, meeting this July 29th, 2000 in Montreal, Qc., Canada, at the Canadian Association of Social Worker’s HIV/AIDS Symposium held in conjunction with the Joint Conference of the International Federation of Social Workers and the International Association of Schools of Social Work.
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SOLEMNLY DECLARE:
(1) WITH RESPECT TO HUMAN RIGHTS
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(2) WITH REGARD TO SOCIAL AND HEALTH POLICY
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(3) WITH REGARD TO SOCIAL WORK EDUCATION
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(4) WITH REGARD TO PARTNERSHIPS
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(5) WITH REGARD TO SOCIAL RESEARCH
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WE THEREFORE RESOLVE:
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Endorsed by the IFSW Officer's Committee Meeting, January 2001
page last updated on 07.10.2005
