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Developmental Social Work and the Sustainable Development Goals in South Africa: Opportunities and Challenges

The International Journal of Community and Social Development, 2020

The main thrust of this article concerns the potential for the social work profession to contribute to the attainment of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) which overlap with developmental social work, specifically with respect to poverty and inequalities in South Africa. Although developmental social work practice may attempt to tackle the structural causes of poverty and inequality, relatively few studies appear to have been conducted to evaluate the contribution of this approach to attaining SDGs. The article draws from contemporary available literature and documents and the author's observations pertaining to developmental social work and the role which it can play in attaining SDGs in the context of present-day South Africa. The review revealed the potential for developmental social work to make a meaningful contribution to attaining SDGs and the factors which could continue to hinder developmental social work practice, thereby making it difficult for SDGs.

Southern African Reflections on Social Work and Social Justice

2017

This is the Special Section on Southern African Reflections on Social Work and Social Justice, comprised of an introduction by the editor, Otrude N. Moyo, a photo essay by Lauren Rose Caldie, and six other articles, which are grouped here in one downloadable special section containing all of the materials. The authors include: Otrude N. Moyo (Editor); Lauren Rose Caldie; Otrude N. Moyo; Zandile P. Nkabinde; Vuyelwa Langelihle Sibindi; Martin Moyo; Nenekazi Melody Gxashe; Thandi S. Tshabangu-Soko

1 The post-1994 transformation of social work in South Africa

2014

This paper examines the transformation of social work in South Africa in response to the transition to a developmental welfare approach. Always moulding and shaping itself in response to its social context, social work in South Africa, as elsewhere, is a reflection of the broader political landscape. In South Africa the social work profession has struggled to assert its independence and become self regulating. It is unique in the Western world in that since 1978 it has been regulated by a legislatively constituted statutory council. While the profession has tried to transform itself in the new democracy, outside pressures have found it wanting and deeply divided. Thus despite progress in other areas social workers have not yet been successful in forming a strong, united professional association and this severely limits its ability to lobby politicians and advocate on behalf of clients. It seems, however, that the tide is turning and social workers are gaining recognition but, once a...

Embedding the developmental approach in social work education and practice to overcome poverty: The case of Southern Africa

Greenwich Social Work Review

The article examines the extent to which social work education and practice in Eswatini, Lesotho and Zimbabwe has embedded the developmental approach to address the problem of poverty and to bring about socio-economic transformation in these countries. This is particularly significant as social work has gained traction internationally as a problem-solving profession. However, it is argued that that there is a lack of clarity conceptually about how the developmental approach should be operationalised in order to deal with the social problems afflicting African countries in general and Southern Africa in particular. Furthermore the chapter examines challenges in the implementation of the developmental approach in economically fragile contexts such as Eswatini, Lesotho and Zimbabwe. The gaps and constraints in mainstreaming developmental social work are also examined in the context of poverty, globalisation and impacts of natural disasters. Challenges experienced by frontline social wo...

The expansion of developmental social work in Southern and East Africa: Opportunities and challenges for social work field programmes

This article reports on a study that examined how fieldwork education in Southern and East Africa was responding to the developmental social work agenda. The study used semi-structured qualitative interviews with key informants from 15 social work programmes in 11 different Southern and East African countries. It investigated whether the social work fieldwork placements on offer provided practical experience of a developmental approach to social work practice. The study showed the creativity and enthusiasm with which social work educators were embracing the goals of developmental social work education, despite the pitfalls and limitations of doing this within fieldwork resource constraints. This article reports on a study that sought to examine how fieldwork education in Southern and East Africa was responding to the developmental social work agenda. The shaping of relevant, culturally appropriate and socially responsive social work practice in Africa rests crucially on the extent to which future practitioners understand the context in which their work is conducted.