Sexual Ethics
Thursday,
December 1, 2022 from 10:00 am – 4:30 pm
Online via Zoom
6.0 CE Hours
for Social Work (MICEC) and MCBAP (RELATED)
This course
meets the Ethics requirement (5.0 hours) for Social Work continuing education
Course fee: $99
Presenter: Joe
Kort, Ph.D., LMSW
Participants
will enhance their ability to help clients manage sexual boundaries and
challenge their own preconceived notions about sex and morality. Therapists will question their own sexual
ethics as it relates to consent and non-consent. An essential part of teaching
sexual ethics is getting people to reflect honestly both on what they believe
and on how they have been led to those beliefs.
Sexual ethics involve issues such as consent, sexual orientation, gender
identification, sexual relations and procreation. This workshop will explore
sexual ethics with technology, managing conflicts of interests as it relates to
erotic transference from the clients, and ethics as it relates to working with
sexual infidelity, clients who are managing sexual partners where STI/STD are
present and ethical positions on sex work. Together we will explore how sexual
pleasure is often narrowly defined in terms of heteronormative penetration, and
whether it is possible to use pornography or pay for sexual acts if we strive
to be ethically sexual citizens. Sexual
ethics are more than our personal choices and preferences; they are the ways we
integrate care and respect for others, mutuality, and reciprocity into sexual
practices. Thinking about the messages that influence sexual practices requires
that we critically interrogate socio-cultural discourses about gender and
sexuality and the contexts in which they circulate. This will be the framework
for the course. We will explore gender, race, sexuality, and class construct
sexual expectations. We will look at how
clients negotiate their sexual autonomy independently and in relationships. We
will discuss how sexism, racism and the normalization of heterosex in
sexualized popular culture and pornography shape sexual practices. Therapists
will increase their understanding of sexual ethics and technology, their
ability to identify conflicts of interest, awareness of managing conflicts of
interest, their awareness of crossing boundaries for themselves and in
relationships versus violating them, and explore sexual boundaries with clients
along the lines of erotic transference from the client to therapist. Therapists
will examine their ethics around working with sexual infidelity, HIV.