Unjust Freedom: The Ethics of Client Self-Determination in Runaway Youth Shelters |
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Authors: | Karen M. Staller Stuart A. Kirk |
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Affiliation: | (1) Social Work, Columbia University School, New York, NY, 10025;(2) Social Welfare, University of California, Los Angeles |
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Abstract: | Client self-determination has been called the most confounding and professionally debilitating concept of all the intellectual principles under-girding social work (Rothman, 1989). Identifying the appropriate parameters of client self-determination is a particularly acute problem for social workers employed by runaway and homeless youth shelters where minors are making adult decisions free from parental guidance. We examine the ethical dimensions of practice with minor clients in runaway shelters by arguing that a conflict exists between the liberty-based principle of self-determination and the justice-based notion of client competency. We analyze the conflict by using minimal distributive justice as the organizing principle of social work practice. We conclude that client self-determination in runaway shelters should be restricted and that presuming client competence violates the basic value tenets of the profession. |
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