Abstract

From social work’s early days, African American social workers were engaged in what today is termed as political social work, yet their work is often overlooked in both social work education and the broader retelling of our profession’s history. This article examines the early history of African American political social work, using Lane and Pritzker’s (2018) five domains of political social work. We outline ways in which African American social workers’ lived experiences led them to engage in political social work to support community survival and to challenge injustice during the Black Migration period post-slavery, the Jim Crow Era, and the Civil Rights Movement. Even as broader structural dynamics sought to exclude African Americans from the political arena, dynamic and influential African American social workers laid the groundwork for modern political social work. They politically engaged their communities, lobbied for legislation, worked in the highest levels of government, supported campaigns, and ran and held elective office to ensure that civil rights were given and maintained. This manuscript calls for a shift from social work’s white-dominant historical narrative and curricula (Bell, 2014; DeLoach McCutcheon, 2019) to assertive discussion of the historic roles African American political social work pioneers played in furthering political empowerment and challenging social injustice.

Highlights

  • Example StrategiesIncreasing voting and voter registration via community individuals and communities in outreach political processes

  • From social work’s early days, African American social workers were engaged in what today is termed as political social work, yet their work is often overlooked in both social work education and the broader retelling of our profession’s history

  • We offer a historical corrective that brings attention to a deep history of African American political social workers and associated organizations fighting for social, economic, and political justice

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Summary

Example Strategies

Increasing voting and voter registration via community individuals and communities in outreach political processes. Advocating for increased voting rights and more just and responsive electoral processes. Domain 2: Influencing policy Influencing candidates’ policy agendas agendas and decision making Influencing elected officials’ policy agendas and policy decision-making. Working on policy via civil service or other professional professional and political staff positions positions

African American Political Social Workers
Discussion and Implications
Shifting the Social Work Narrative
Social Work Education
Conclusion
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