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Journal ArticleDOI

Torture and terror post-9/11: The role of social work in responding to torture:

Aloysia Brooks
- 01 Mar 2015 - 
- Vol. 58, Iss: 2, pp 320-331
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TLDR
The authors argue that social work response to challenging pro-torture rhetoric has been limited at best, and to effectively address the problem there must be an international response if social work is to adhere to its obligations under the IFSW Code of Ethics, and fulfil its role as a human rights profession.
Abstract
Whilst terrorism is not a new global phenomenon, the fallout from the 9/11 terrorist attacks in the US remain extensive and far reaching, including the sanctioning of harsher security measures and the denigration of human rights and civil liberties. Of particular concern is the move towards torture being an accepted practice for those deemed ‘terror suspects’ or captured ‘enemy’ combatants in countries where the so called ‘war on terror’ is still being played out. This article argues that the social work response, particularly in relation to challenging pro-torture rhetoric, has been limited at best, and to effectively address the problem there must be an international response if social work is to adhere to its obligations under the IFSW Code of Ethics, and fulfil its role as a human rights profession.

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References
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Validating tortured refugees: reconnection in social work policy and practice

TL;DR: Person-in-situation as discussed by the authors is the focus of social work, connecting social entities encompassing individuals, groups or communities of people to their environments in an evolutionary and positive dynamic.
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A murky portrait of human cruelty

TL;DR: Diverse lines of research conducted at both the macrosocial and microbehavioral level that dispute the view that cruelty is inherently gratifying are reviewed.
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On turning a blind eye and a deaf ear: society's response to the use of torture.

TL;DR: An individual and group psychoanalytic examination of what happens to the citizens of a society that not only condones but authorizes torture is examined for its parallels to the authors' current times within the United States.
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Can a radical social worker believe in human rights

TL;DR: This article posed a fundamental question: "Can a radical social worker believe in human rights?" The answer is "no" and the question was then answered by the authors of the paper "Can Radical Social Worker Believe in Human Rights?"

Torturing byonState Actors Invisibilized, A Patr iarchal Divide and Spillover Violence from the Military Sphere into the Domestic Sphere

TL;DR: In this article, the authors describe how non-state actor torture (NSAT) inflic ted by a mother, father, sibling and guardians who had warring or military experiences, spilled over into the domestic sphere.