SWOP Behind Bars Advocacy from the Margins

Intent Isn't Impact: When Good Policy Harms

3 min · 1. maj 2026
episode Intent Isn't Impact: When Good Policy Harms cover

Beskrivelse

This episode examines how well‑branded feminist language - empowerment, protection, dignity - can be layered onto policies that still produce harm in practice. We trace how branding shapes who supports a policy, who is invited into the conversation, and whose experiences are treated as credible, creating distance between how a policy is described and how it is lived. Using thought experiments that apply the same logic to industries like construction, child care, and lawn care, the episode shows how contradictions become impossible to ignore. A concrete case study - Polk County’s operation marketed as a rescue - reveals how “help” can look like arrest: dozens of arrests, public exposure, and long‑term consequences for housing, work, and family stability. The central question is clear: intent is not a metric. If policies increase risk, isolation, or economic instability, goodwill and branding don’t matter. The episode calls for measuring outcomes where it matters - in people’s lives - and asks: safer for whom?

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episode The Lesbian Feminist Who Refused to Abandon Sex Workers: Pat Califia and the Politics of Sexual Dissent cover

The Lesbian Feminist Who Refused to Abandon Sex Workers: Pat Califia and the Politics of Sexual Dissent

One of the strangest recurring patterns inside institutional feminism is how efficiently it forgets the women who challenged its boundaries most aggressively. Not accidentally forgets - the forgetting tends to be too consistent and too convenient to be accidental. The women who are quietly edited out of official histories are usually the ones whose existence raises questions the institution is not prepared to answer. The ones whose politics could not be absorbed without requiring something to change. Especially queer women. Especially kinky women. Especially sex workers. Especially anyone who refused to separate sexual liberation from political liberation, or who insisted that the two were not just compatible but inseparable - that a feminism willing to use the state to regulate sexuality was not actually a feminism interested in women's freedom. That is a significant part of why Pat Califia remains such an important figure, and one so often deliberately overlooked, in both feminist and LGBTQ history. Califia's work was foundational. It was also, for large portions of the institutional feminist world, deeply unwelcome - and that combination of foundational and unwelcome is precisely why the erasure has been so persistent and so instructive.

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