Prevent, Safeguarding and the Common-Sensing of Social Work in the UK

Article
McKendrick, D. and Finch, J. 2019. PREVENT, Safeguarding and the Common-Sensing of Social Work in the UK. Aotearoa New Zealand Social Work . 31 (2), pp. 18-28.
Authors McKendrick, D. and Finch, J.
Journal Aotearoa New Zealand Social Work
Journal citation 31 (2), pp. 18-28
ISSN 2463-4131
Year 2019
Publisher Aotearoa New Zealand Association of Social Workers
Publisher's version 631-1958-1-SM.pdfLicenseCC BY 4.0File Access LevelAnyone
Digital Object Identifier (DOI) doi:10.11157/anzswj-vol31iss2id631
Web address (URL) http://dx.doi.org/10.11157/anzswj-vol31iss2id631
Online 2019
Accepted 18 Mar 2019
Deposited 12 Sep 2019
Copyright holder © 2019 ANZASW.

Abstract/Introduction

The Counter-Terrorism and Security Act (2015) passed in the United Kingdom (UK) made it mandatory for social workers, as well as a wide range of caring professionals, to work within the PREVENT policy, originally introduced in 2002, as one strand of the UK’s overall counter-terrorism policy. METHOD: The paper offers a theoretical account of how complex issues, like terrorism, that understandably impact on the safety and security of countries, are reduced to a series of assertions, claims and panics that centre on the notion of common sense. IMPLICATIONS: We theorise the concept of common sense and argue that such rhetorical devices have become part of the narrative that surrounds the PREVENT agenda in the UK, which co-opts social workers (and other public servants) into an increasingly securitised environment within the state. In other words, the appeal to common sense stifles critical debate, makes it hard to raise concerns and positions debates in a binary manner. We use the example of how there has been a decisive linking of traditional safeguarding social work practice with counter-terrorism activity CONCLUSIONS: We posit that linkages such as this serve to advance a more closed society, resulting in a “chilling” of free speech, an increase in surveillance and the unchecked advancement of a neoliberal political agenda which promotes economic considerations over issues of social justice. This we argue, has implications for not only the UK, but for other countries where social workers are increasingly being tasked with counter-terrorism activities. Originally published by UEL here.