Moshoula Capous Desyllas’s research while affiliated with California State University, Northridge and other places

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Publications (4)


Zine-Making as a Pedagogical Tool for Transformative Learning in Social Work Education
  • Article

April 2014

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849 Reads

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52 Citations

Moshoula Capous Desyllas

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Allison Sinclair

As a collaborative endeavor between teacher and student, we reflect on the process of creating and sharing social justice oriented zines in our classroom. Zines can be used as a pedagogical tool for awareness, education, empowerment and transformation. Created in the form of self-published work of original and/or appropriated texts and images, zines are usually presented in small booklet format in a variety of ways, from computer-printed text to comics to handwritten text. When shared, they represent a subversive form of media to deconstruct stereotypes and hegemonic representations perpetuated by mainstream media. Through our classroom project, we found that zines provided an opportunity for creative expression, connection and collaboration. As an experiential technique, they can serve to raise student self-awareness and allow for a broader understanding of power hierarchies. As a direct action tool they can be useful for promoting active class participation in the movement for social justice. We advocate for integrating arts-based projects in social work education in order to promote more embodied ways of learning and to facilitate personal and societal transformation.


Representations of sex workers' needs and aspirations: A case for arts-based research

December 2013

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266 Reads

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31 Citations

Sexualities

This article reviews the literature on sex work, highlighting ways in which women working in the sex industry are represented. The subjective experiences and voices of sex workers are seldom heard and their needs are consistently defined and represented by non-sex workers throughout history, in society and within academia. Historical representations have contributed to the stereotyping and stigmatization of sex workers. Academic research is consistently being done on sex workers instead of with them. However, arts-based methods allow for participatory, shared knowledge creation. Arts-based research also has the potential for empowerment, reaching the general public and changing negative stereotypes. © The Author(s) 2013 Reprints and permissions: sagepub.co.uk/journalsPermissions.nav.


Using photovoice with sex workers: The power of art, agency and resistance

June 2013

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574 Reads

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78 Citations

Qualitative Social Work

Situated within an arts-based research framework, photovoice method was utilized with women working in diverse aspects of the sex industry. The purpose of this project was to understand sex workers' lived experiences through their own artistic self-representation. This supports the acknowledgement of individual strengths, skills, visions, and voice. Another goal was to provide opportunities for group dialogue, engagement in community education, and activism through art. The findings from this study have implications for furthering our understanding of the lives of sex workers. Specifically, attention is given to the role of intersectionality as informing the lived experiences of sex workers. Findings from this study also highlight sex workers' shared experiences of stigma and the use of photography as an act of resistance to this stigma. This project confirms how empowerment comes about through the arts. Using photovoice method with sex workers affirms agency, self-representation, voice, and choice in sex work. © The Author(s) 2013 Reprints and permissions: sagepub.co.uk/journalsPermissions.nav.


A Critique of the Global Trafficking Discourse and U.S. Policy

December 2007

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415 Reads

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95 Citations

The Journal of Sociology & Social Welfare

This article examines the dominant discourse on trafficking in persons and the implementation of international and U.S. policy to address trafficking globally. Features of the United Nations Protocol and the Trafficking in Victims Protection Act demonstrate how trafficking frameworks currently in place contain underlying fears of migration and female sexuality. The implications of policy on the construction of third world women as "victims to be saved" through governments, National Government Organizations, feminists and the media will show how these misrespresentations only reinforce racism and dualistic simplifications of a complex issue. An emphasis is placed on the importance of women's agency and the possibility of multiple realities. An alternative way of thinking about human trafficking and related policy through a labor rights, migration and human rights framework is proposed.

Citations (4)


... The government also did not provide permanent or temporary residency status to trafficking victims. Female victims of trafficking and other crimes faced sexual harassment and assault and degrading treatment by predominantly male law enforcement and judicial officials in Libya (Capous, 2007). The government continued to operate rehabilitation centres for women in prostitution and victims of sex trafficking and other forms of sexual abuse; however, these centres reportedly operated as de facto prisons, and international observers documented incidents of abuse in these centres (Haynes, 2009). ...

Reference:

International Journal of Social Sciences and Management Review UNITED NATIONS GLOBAL INITIATIVE AND HUMAN TRAFFICKING IN LIBYA (2007 2020)
A Critique of the Global Trafficking Discourse and U.S. Policy
  • Citing Article
  • December 2007

The Journal of Sociology & Social Welfare

... The term sex work is often used broadly, to capture a variety of sexual services and settings for sexual commerce (Desyllas, 2013;Sawicki et al., 2019). This can include various acts such as such as full-service (Sawicki et al., 2019) stripping, camming, and phone sex among others (Grittner & Walsh, 2020;Preble et al., 2019). ...

Representations of sex workers' needs and aspirations: A case for arts-based research
  • Citing Article
  • December 2013

Sexualities

... Arts-based practices can provide opportunities for people's voices to be heard, facilitate more profound reflections and dialog, and empower them to better articulate their experiences. Capous-Desyllas found that arts-based practices have the ability to transform and empower, which in turn can bring about social change within society [63]. ...

Using photovoice with sex workers: The power of art, agency and resistance
  • Citing Article
  • June 2013

Qualitative Social Work

... Hence, throughout this article, we weave our reflexive dialogue with our reflections recorded before, during and after the workshop, alongside selected proverbs, zine artworks, and students' reflections from the workshop. Such a collage of materials -an artistic technique common in zine-makingthat make up the body of the article follows a similar practice by scholars/artists in their intervention utilising zines within the context of the neoliberal university (Bagelman and Bagelman 2016;Capous Desyllas and Sinclair 2014;Scheper 2023). The empirical components (students' questionnaire responses and artworks) integrated into this dialogue were based on a study that received ethical approval from the Keele University Research Ethics Committee on 9 May 2023 (REC Project Reference: 0542). ...

Zine-Making as a Pedagogical Tool for Transformative Learning in Social Work Education
  • Citing Article
  • April 2014