Beyond the Code of Ethics, Part II: Dual Relationships Revisited

Author:

Freud Sophie1,Krug Stefan2

Affiliation:

1. Simmons College School of Social Work; mailing address: 34 Laurel Drive, Lincoln, MA 01773.

2. Doctoral Program, Simmons College School of Social Work, 300 Fenway, Boston, MA 02115.

Abstract

The authors, both social work educators, serve on an ethics call line committee that provides insights on how the provisions of the (United States) National Association of Social Workers Code of Ethics (NASW, 1996) interface with the ethical dilemmas encountered by the social work community. In this paper, the authors highlight aspects of social work practice that they consider ethical, yet not easily accommodated by the provisions of the current Code. They also question the 1996 introduction of the concept of dual relationships into the Code and suggest that the Code adopt the less ambiguous term of boundary violations. Also recognized by the authors is the need for clear boundaries for the protection of clients against temptations that might arise in a fiduciary relationship, and for the legal protection of social workers. But, the authors argue, social work practitioners in certain settings, with particular populations, and in certain roles, inevitably face multiple relationships as an integral aspect of their work. The authors conclude that social work's adoption of the psychoanalytic constrains of anonymity, neutrality, and abstinence has detoured the profession from its original double focus on individuals and their society.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Social Sciences (miscellaneous)

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