African Centre for Migration & Society, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa.
Sisonke National Sex Worker Movement, Johannesburg, South Africa.
Glob Public Health. 2022 Oct;17(10):2521-2529. doi: 10.1080/17441692.2022.2061555. Epub 2022 Jun 16.
This piece features the voices of sex worker participants in a collaborative project between the African Centre for Migration and Society (ACMS) at the University of the Witwatersrand and the Sisonke National Sex Workers Movement in South Africa. The ACMS and Sisonke envisioned the newsletter project as an opportunity for researchers to learn more about sex workers' lived experiences and for activists to gather stories to inform their work promoting social justice. The newsletter partnership began in 2015 and continued until Sisonke took over in 2019, fulfilling the newsletter's tagline 'a newsletter by sex workers for sex workers.' But did the collaboration help Sisonke promote social justice or benefit the participants? The authors brought together writers who are still active in Sisonke to reflect on the project. While this discussion and critique of the transcript were meant to take place in person, as in workshops, the global pandemic limited meetings. Revision of the discussion was still collaborative, conducted over the phone, e-mail, and WhatsApp. The discussion reveals some of the successes, challenges, and unintended consequences of the use of creative writing to promote social justice and the collaboration of researchers and activists.
这篇文章收录了性工作者参与者的声音,他们参与了一个合作项目,该项目由威特沃特斯兰德大学的非洲移民与社会研究中心(ACMS)和南非的 Sisonke 全国性工作者运动共同发起。ACMS 和 Sisonke 将这份通讯项目视为研究人员更多地了解性工作者生活经历的机会,也是活动家们收集故事以促进社会正义工作的机会。该通讯合作始于 2015 年,并持续到 2019 年 Sisonke 接手,实现了通讯的口号“性工作者为性工作者服务”。但是,这种合作是否有助于 Sisonke 促进社会正义或使参与者受益?作者召集了仍活跃在 Sisonke 的撰稿人来反思这个项目。虽然这次讨论和对文字记录的批判本来是要面对面进行的,就像在研讨会上一样,但全球大流行限制了会议的进行。讨论的修订仍然是合作进行的,通过电话、电子邮件和 WhatsApp 进行。讨论揭示了一些使用创意写作来促进社会正义以及研究人员和活动家合作的成功、挑战和意外后果。