Abstract

What should be the African social worker in the modern world. The African social worker has discovered that most clinical and other modern social work practices are Euro-centric. And only reflect only European values. He knows that African communal social work practices existed in an ethnocentric environment that encourages an African-centred world view. How this African centred world view wouyld help him to define a new social work values with a paradigmatic shift to his roles as a profession is a challenge to both social philosophy and its social work concentrates. Therefore this article raises serious concerns about the ethnocentric nature of existing paradigms within the social sciences that form the basis for social work theory and practice with implications for modern social work in Africa. In addition, it highlights the theoretical deficits within existing social work models that do not reflect the worldviews of diverse cultural communities in modern world. Can existing social work models continue to express ethnocentric value systems as the universal way to explain human behaviour in the light of growing demands for pluralism not only between groups but also between epistemologies and worldviews? The authors of the article, writing from the perspective of the new African social science, argues for an alternative paradigm that is grounded in the cultural and historical reality of the African communal experience.

Highlights

  • The Values and Basic Concepts of Social Work and Social WelfareSocial welfare is an adjunct of social philosophy and subtiantial part of the discipline of social work

  • Mekada (2013) in his “The African-Centred Worldview: Developing a Paradigm for Social Work”, made a very possible argument about the need for a plural source of values that could reflect the diverse cultural of mankind to inform social philosophy and social work

  • We find that we do have a philosophy of social work that is intimate and personal as well as professional

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Summary

Introduction—The Values and Basic Concepts of Social Work and Social Welfare

Social welfare is an adjunct of social philosophy and subtiantial part of the discipline of social work. Mekada (2013) in his “The African-Centred Worldview: Developing a Paradigm for Social Work”, made a very possible argument about the need for a plural source of values that could reflect the diverse cultural of mankind to inform social philosophy and social work. In addition to and extending beyond the range of its responsibilities for specific services, social welfare has a further function within the broad area of a country’s social development In this larger sense, social welfare should play a major role in contributing to the effective mobilization and deployment of human and material resources of the country to deal successfully with the social requirements of change, thereby participating in nation-building.”. “Social welfare (in HK) embraces laws, programmes, benefits and services which address social needs accepted as essential to the well-being of a society It focuses on personal and social problems, both existing and potential. It plays an important developmental role by providing an organized system of services and institutions which are designed to aid individuals and groups to achieve satisfying roles in life and personal relationships which permit them to develop their full capacities and to promote their well-being in harmony with the needs and aspirations of their families and the community.”

Nature of Social Welfare: A Philosophical Exposition
Economic Domain
Political Domain
Social Domain
Conceptual Framework for Studying Social Welfare
Conclusion
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