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Ethical Principles and
Standards for Process Workers
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Introduction
This ethics code applies to activities
that are part of the educational and/or professional roles of
Process Work practitioners. Areas covered include but are not
limited to the clinical, counseling and educational practice
of Process Work, research, teaching, supervision of trainees,
public service, social intervention, organizational consulting,
program design and evaluation, and administration. This ethics
code applies to these activities across a variety of contexts,
such as in-person, postal, telephone, internet and other electronic
transmissions. These activities shall be distinguished from the
purely private conduct of Process Workers, which is not within
the purview of the ethics code.
This document consists of an introduction, preamble, general
principles, and specific ethical standards.
The preamble and general principles
describe aspirational goals that are intended to guide Process
Workers toward the highest ideals of its practice. Although the
general principles are not themselves enforceable rules, they
should be considered by Process Workers in arriving at an ethical
course of action. The ethical standards set forth enforceable
rules for conduct as Process Workers.
As used in this document, the
term reasonable means the prevailing professional judgment of
practitioners engaged in similar activities in similar circumstances,
given the knowledge the practitioner had or should have had at
the time.
Preamble
Process Work is the practice
of tracking and working with the flow of process in individuals,
relationships, groups, culture and society. It is a broad-spectrum
awareness modality that spans a range of applications, from individual
counseling, psychotherapy, and body work modalities to group
facilitation, community development and conflict resolution.
Process Work seeks to elicit the core of potential meaning and
growth that lies at the heart of even the most disturbing human
situations.
Process Work recognizes a commitment
to core values of awareness, learning, relationship and wholeness
as integral to ethical conduct. The practice of Process Work
is a discipline that encourages the practitioner's willingness
to work on his or her own process to benefit the whole. To this
end Process Workers are encouraged to continue their personal
growth through therapy, inner work, study, research, community
involvement, and through working on their personal and professional
relationships.
This ethics code has as its goal
the welfare and protection of the individuals and groups with
whom Process Workers work and the education of faculty, students,
and other interested parties regarding ethical standards of Process
Work.
Ethical Principles
Principle A: Beneficence and
Nonmaleficence
Process Workers strive to both
benefit those with whom they work and to do no harm. In their
professional actions, Process Workers seek to safeguard the welfare
and rights of both those with whom they interact professionally
and other affected persons. When conflicts occur among Process
Workers' obligations or concerns, they attempt to resolve these
conflicts in a responsible fashion that avoids or minimizes harm.
Because Process Workers' professional judgments and actions may
affect the lives of others, they are alert to and guard against
personal, financial, social, organizational, or political factors
that might lead to misuse of their influence. Process Workers
strive to be aware of the possible effect of their own physical
and mental health on their ability to help those with whom they
work.
Principle B: Integrity and Competence
Process Workers seek to promote
accuracy, honesty, and truthfulness in the practice and teaching
of Process Work. In these activities Process Workers do not steal,
cheat, or engage in fraud, subterfuge, or intentional misrepresentation
of fact. Process Workers strive to keep their promises and to
avoid unwise or unclear commitments. In situations in which deception
may be ethically justifiable to maximize benefits and minimize
harm, Process Workers have a serious obligation to consider the
need for, the possible consequences of, and their responsibility
to correct any resulting mistrust or other harmful effects that
arise from the use of such techniques. Process Workers aspire
to recognize and promote wholeness in themselves, their clients
and in groups with which they work.
Principle C: Professional Responsibility
Process Workers establish relationships
of trust with those with whom they work. They are aware of their
professional responsibilities to society and to the specific
communities in which they work. Process Workers uphold professional
standards of conduct, clarify their professional roles and obligations,
accept appropriate responsibility for their behavior, and seek
to manage conflicts of interest that could lead to exploitation
or harm. Process Workers consult with, refer to, or cooperate
with other professionals and institutions to the extent needed
to serve the best interests of those with whom they work.
Process Workers strive to maintain
a high level of competence in their work. They are expected to
continue growing both professionally and in their personal development.
They regard the study of Process Work as a lifelong process and
recognize the need for continuing education, and/or therapy,
and/or consultation, and/or supervision. Because Process Work
interfaces with disciplines such as sociology, anthropology,
psychology, the arts, theology, medicine, and various physical
and life sciences, Process Workers strive to recognize the limitations
of their own competence and take reasonable measures to seek
assistance and/or to refer clients to practitioners from other
disciplines.
Principle D: Respect for People's Rights and Dignity
Process Workers respect the dignity
and worth of all people, and the rights of individuals to privacy,
confidentiality, and self-determination. Process Workers are
aware that special safeguards may be necessary to protect the
rights and welfare of persons or communities whose vulnerabilities
impair autonomous decision making. Process Workers are aware
of and respect cultural, individual, and role differences, including
those based on age, gender, gender identity, race, ethnicity,
culture, national origin, religion, sexual orientation, disability,
language, and socioeconomic status and consider these factors
when working with members of such groups. Process Workers try
to eliminate the effect on their work of biases based on those
factors, and they do not knowingly participate in or condone
activities of others based upon such prejudices.
Principle E: Social Responsibility
Process Workers strive to be
aware of the broader social context and consequences of their
work with individuals, couples, families and groups. When conflicts
occur between Process Workers' explicit responsibility to clients
and implicit responsibility to wider social groups, they attempt
to resolve these conflicts in a responsible fashion that avoids
or minimizes harm to either. To this end Process Workers aspire
to learn about the broader social contexts in which they work
on which their work has an impact.
Principle F: Relationships
Process Workers understand that
relationships between and among people are an important vehicle
for change. Process Workers engage people as partners in the
helping process. Process Workers seek to strengthen relationships
among people in a purposeful effort to promote, restore, maintain,
and enhance the well-being of individuals, families, social groups,
organizations, and communities.
Ethical Standards
1. Responsibility to Clients
1.02 Nondiscrimination
Process Workers do not discriminate
against clients on the basis of age, gender, race, ethnicity,
national origin, religion, sexual orientation, disability, socioeconomic
status, or any other basis included in and/or proscribed by law.
In additional, Process Workers make reasonable effort to maintain
awareness around social and other forms of rank and privilege.
1.03 Boundaries of Competence
When Process Workers find themselves
in situations that reach beyond their knowledge, they are expected
to make a reasonable effort to obtain the competence required
by using relevant research and/or training and/or consultation
and/or study.
1.04 Rank and Power
Process Workers make a reasonable
effort to both be aware of the dynamics of rank and power in
their professional relationships, and to insure that the client's
best interests are thereby served.
1.05 Sexual Relationships
Process Workers do not enter
into sexual relationships with current clients. Process Workers
do not enter into sexual relationships with former clients for
a period of at least two years following termination of therapy.
Even after a period of two years
following termination of therapy, Process Workers do not enter
into sexual relationships with former clients except in the most
unusual circumstances.
Process Workers who engage in
such relationships after two years following termination of therapy
bear the burden of demonstrating that there has been no coercion
or exploitation of the former client as a result of the sexual
relationship, and that the former client has made an informed
and consensual decision to embark on the relationship. The Process
Worker, together with a competent and disinterested third party/parties,
will sort out her or his own motivations and/or relationship
history, and/or any therapeutic issues. With the help of a competent
and disinterested third party, both the Process Worker and the
former client will sort out issues of power and/or rank and/or
privilege.
1.06 Sexual Harassment
Process Workers are aware of
the seriousness of sexual harassment and its potential for abuse.
Consequently, Process Workers do not engage in sexual harassment,
which is perceived as soliciting sexual favors and/or making
physical advances either verbally or non-verbally that is sexual
in nature.
1.07 Physical Contact
The therapeutic value of touch
has been recognized and well-documented. See, for instance, "Touching:
The Human Significance of the Skin" by Ashley Montagu (Harper
Collins, 1986). As a therapeutic modality, Process Work recognizes
the therapeutic value of touch, and may include various forms
of bodywork involving physical contact. Physical contact is used
only with the client's consent. The appropriate use of physical
contact depends on a number of considerations, including the
client's history and/or background and/or morality and/or mental
state and/or diagnosis and/or condition and/or culture.
1.08 Multiple Relationships
It is well recognized that multiple
relationships are an inherent and unavoidable aspect of life
in small communities and subcultures, for example rural communities,
university counseling centers, or ethnic and non-ethnic subcultures
such as the disabled and the gay/lesbian/bisexual/transgender
communities, training institutes, specialized educational centers,
and learning communities. Process Workers avoid multiple relationships
that are harmful, and/or exploitative and/or involve a conflict
of interest.
A Process Worker refrains from entering into a multiple relationship
if the multiple relationship could reasonably be expected to
impair the Process Worker's objectivity, competence, or effectiveness
in performing his or her functions as a Process Worker, or otherwise
risks exploitation or harm to the person with whom the professional
relationship exists.
Multiple relationships that would not reasonably be expected
to cause impairment or risk exploitation or harm are not unethical.
In those cases or situations
where there may be some question, lack of clarity, or confusion,
it is the Process Worker's responsibility to seek assistance
through supervision and/or therapy and/or consultation with a
third party.
When a conflict of interest arises
or judgment is impaired, the Process Worker must withdraw from
the dual relationship taking care to minimize harm to the client
1.09 Exploitative Relationships
Process Workers do not exploit
clients for personal or professional gain.
1.10 Confidentiality and Records
Process Workers do not disclose
information entrusted to them in their professional capacity
by clients. At the onset of a Process Worker/client relationship,
issues of confidentiality should be discussed unless it is not
feasible, and thereafter as new circumstances may warrant. Where
the Process Worker seeks supervision and/or consultation about
their work with a client, or where information is used for educational
and publication purposes, reasonable care must be taken to protect
the client's identity (also, see 1.11 and 2.2 below).
1.11 Confidentiality and Supervision
When consulting with colleagues,
Process Workers do not disclose confidential information that
reasonably could lead to the identification of a client, or other
person or organization with whom they have a confidential relationship
unless they have obtained the prior consent of the person or
organization, or the disclosure cannot be avoided. When consulting
with colleagues they disclose information only to the extent
necessary to achieve the purposes of the consultation.
1.12 Fees and Financial Arrangements
As close as possible to the onset
of a Process Worker/client relationship, fees and/or other financial
issues should be discussed, and an agreement specifying compensation
and billing arrangements should be reached. Process Workers take
reasonable care to ensure that fees are fair, reasonable, and
in general commensurate with the going rate for services rendered.
Process Workers do not misrepresent their fees.
Barter, the acceptance of goods,
services or other nonmonetary remuneration from clients in return
for professional services, is permissible only if: 1) It is not
clinically contraindicated, and 2) the resulting arrangement
is not exploitative.
1.13 Continuity and Termination
of Services
Process Workers should make reasonable
efforts to ensure continuity of services, and to inform current
and prospective clients of their availability and and/or interruptions
to their availability. Services to the client may terminate when
either the client, the Process Worker or both agree that it is
time to stop. If the Process Worker chooses to terminate, he
or she is responsible for taking reasonable steps to make an
appropriate referral.
2. Responsibilities to Students
2.1 Multiple Relationships in the Process Work Learning Community
The Process Work learning community
is a "small community" in the sense already noted in
1.08. As is typical of such communities, multiple role relationships
are inherent and unavoidable, and all reasonable measures must
be taken to avoid harm and/or exploitation and/or conflict of
interest in such relationships. Process Workers must make reasonable
effort to be sensitive to power differences in light of the vulnerability
of students and/or their potential difficulties in unequal power
relationships. Process Workers who evaluate trainees must take
all reasonable precautions to avoid conflicts of interest in
evaluation, as well as avoiding situations that impair judgment.
Because the potential for harm and/or exploitation and/or conflict
of interest is greatest when power differentials remain covert,
the Process Work learning community makes available a variety
of procedures and opportunities for sorting out issues of power,
equity and fairness. They include: periodic meetings open to
all students and faculty in which power issues can be addressed;
a Dean of Students who functions as an ombudsperson to help sort
out student-faculty power issues; an Ethics Committee to act
as a mediation body in case of student claims of unequal, unfair
and/or exploitative treatment.
2.2 Sexual relationships between
teachers and students
The Process Work Institute is
committed to fostering a learning environment characterized by
professional behavior and fair and impartial treatment. The Process
Work Institute recognizes student and faculty/staff relationships
as potentially detrimental in that they can contain conflict
of interests, abuse of power and compromised judgment when the
faculty member or staff member has supervisory, evaluative or
other power over the student. The power differential may also
make the student's consent to a sexual or romantic relationship
suspect. The relationship can also create an apparent conflict
of interest that can adversely affect other members of the community
by favoring the interests of the student at the expense of other
third parties.
In view of the vulnerability
of students to exploitation by faculty or staff due to the unequal
power relationship, sexual relationships between faculty/staff
and students are not permitted. The sole exception to this requirement
is a situation in which a student and staff member are married
to each other or have a registered domestic partnership. In the
event that a faculty/staff member and student are in or decide
to enter into a marriage or domestic partnership, the faculty
member must make prompt and appropriate arrangements to address
this conflict of interest. Prompt arrangements means an action
reasonably calculated to remove or substantially mitigate a conflict
of interest, potential conflict of interest, or abuse of power.
These actions will include withdrawal of all supervisory, evaluative
or other power relationships with the student. They will include,
but are not limited to, withdrawal from any study committee on
which they serve with the student, not commenting or contributing
to any faculty evaluations of the student, and withdrawal from
examination, supervision, class teaching and dissertation evaluation
of the student. This withdrawal from all supervisory, evaluative
and other power relationships with the student will occur until
the student has completed their training, irrespective of whether
the relationship continues to this time or not. In the case of
an administrative staff member, the staff member will also withdraw
from any position involving a conflict of interest, such as granting
scholarships or supervising work-study positions.
The faculty or staff member is
required to report the intention immediately to a designated
member of the ethics committee who, as a disinterested third
party, will inform the faculty or staff member of relevant ethical
principles and legal statutes, and monitor his or her withdrawal
from all above mentioned supervisory, evaluative and power positions
in relation to the student.
2.3 Therapist and Student
Evaluation
A student's therapist will not
have any evaluative role of that student in the training program,
such as study committee member, examiner, main supervisor, or
in any other capacity in which the student's performance may
be subject to evaluation. The only exception to this is when
the student consents to having her/his therapist share information
about the student in meetings where the student's professional
development is discussed. (See 2.4 below)
2.4 Confidentiality and Supervision
of Student Work
It is an intrinsic part of Process
Work training that students' personal issues that bear on their
professional development be discussed among faculty in meetings
to evaluate the students' progress. Nevertheless such discussions
may only be conducted with the student's informed consent. The
faculty will make reasonable effort to disclose feedback from
such meetings at the student's request. The student is entitled
to be informed of any decisions pertinent to her/his personal
or professional development.
3. Resolving Ethical Issues
3.1 Familiarity with the "Ethical Principles and Standards
for Process Workers" document
Process Workers must familiarize
themselves with the "Ethical Principles and Standards for
Process Workers". They cannot claim lack of awareness of
ethical standards as a defense against a charge of unethical
conduct.
3.2 Confronting Ethical Issues
When Process Workers have an
ethical issue that they cannot readily resolve by themselves,
they seek out the counsel and/or advice of fellow Process Workers
and/or consultants and/or members of the Process Work Ethics
Committee. If deemed necessary, external experts may be consulted.
3.3 Informal Resolution of
Ethical Issues
A Process Worker who believes
that a colleague has violated the ethical code of Process Work
may attempt to reach an informal resolution by bringing it to
the colleague's attention. In doing so, confidentiality may not
be breached.
3.4 Reporting Ethical Violations
If an adequate informal resolution
of an ethical issue, as described in 3.3 above, cannot be reached
the Process Worker must report the matter to the Process Work
Ethics Committee, taking reasonable steps to ensure that confidentiality
is preserved.
3.5 Cooperating with the Ethics
Committee
It is incumbent upon Process
Workers who have been charged, either by another Process Worker
or by a client, student, or supervisee, with a violation of the
Ethical Principles and Standards of Process Work, to cooperate
with the Ethics Committee in its efforts to seek an appropriate
resolution to the charge. Failure to do so will itself be regarded
as a violation of the Ethical Principles and Standards and the
violator will be subject to whatever action the Committee deems
appropriate.
In the event it is shown that
the person charged is in fact the one to be held accountable,
it is incumbent upon that person to comply with the recommendations
of the Ethics Committee.
3.6 Financial Responsibility
When a Process Worker appears
before the Ethics Committee and is found to have violated an
ethical standard, then the Process Worker is responsible for
expenses incurred to deal with the case.
3.7 Improper Complaints
Process Workers do not file or
encourage the filing of frivolous complaints.
4. The Ethics Committee
4.1 Responsibilities of the Ethics Committee
It is the primary responsibility
of the Ethics Committee to receive complaints of unethical conduct
against Process Workers, to investigate the grounds of these
complaints, and to document and respond to them appropriately.
If the committee finds that the Ethics Code has been breached,
appropriate action may include, but is not restricted to, any
or all of the following: reprimand, censure, ameliorative prescriptions,
education, rehabilitation, and termination of certification to
practice Process Work.
4.2 Process Work Students
and Clients
It is also the responsibility
of the Ethics Committee to receive complaints of unethical conduct
from clients of students in formal training to become Process
Workers. "Students in formal training" refers to those
students in good standing who are registered in one of the Process
Work Institute training programs, who have neither withdrawn
nor been formally dismissed from a program.
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