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social_workersThe National Association of Social Workers is one of the largest membership organizations that is set up to help those who fight for the common and basic rights of humans, the social workers. It has been working to enhance the professional growth and development of its members, to create and maintain professional standards and to advance sound social policies.

The NASW has around 132,000 members. To help regulate the vast amount of manpower, the NASW is broken up into chapters. With a total of 55 chapters, all states have at least one chapter. Each chapter has a board of directors that develops unique programs to better serve its members and to facilitate participation by its members.

All of the members of the NASW benefit from their general practice of enhancing professional development. The members are offered benefits that lead to opportunities that reward important credentials for working in the field.

The NASW’s Credentialing Center provides the programs in which members and non-members can participate and learn. The Center establishes and promotes NASW Professional Credentials, Advanced Practice Specialty Credentials, and the Continuing Education Portal. These embody the message of the NASW: to enhance your professional career in social work. Credentialing allows the social working careerist to differentiate themselves from those who take social work less seriously.

Another focus of the NASW is advocacy. Much like The Borgen Project, the NASW believes that affecting policy change is one of the best ways to initiate change for the better. Social workers have sought to ensure that all people have equal access to the resources and opportunities that allow them to meet their basic needs. So it is important to advocate legislation that will benefit the community and also benefit those social workers looking to help that same community.

The NASW keeps their advocacy work organized through their Policy Agenda. This Policy Agenda prioritizes which legislation the NASW will support when legislation cycles roll around. Some of the issues that the NASW would consider key right now are: Medicare Reimbursement, Affordable Care Act Integration, Student Loan forgiveness, Child Welfare and several more.

The NASW has even tried to expand its influence past American borders. With a combined effort from USAID and other key stakeholders, the NASW held a conference in Africa in order to improve the working conditions of social workers in Africa in order to help fight off the HIV/AIDS virus. The NASW also helped with Tanzania’s social worker community, trying to strengthen and unite the social workers under the Tanzanian Social Worker Association.

With righteous causes and enticing benefits, the NASW is assembling a work force that is capable of making big changes to how efficiently social workers can function in our society. The NASW is fighting for the greater good. So put the NASW on your reading list, right up there with The Borgen Project.

Erik Nelson

Sources: USAID,  SocialWorkers.org
Photo: California University of Pennsylvania

National_Association_Social_Workers
Although most people are familiar with social workers and the various governmental agencies with which they work, not many are familiar with the National Association of Social Workers (NASW). This organization was founded in 1955 as a consolidation of seven other organizations for social workers in the United States.

According to the NASW’s website, it is dedicated to enhancing the professional growth and development of its members across the country, as well as to create and maintain professional standards and ethics and to promote effective social policies.

The NASW has published a standard Code of Ethics in order to maintain consistent practices amongst social workers throughout the United States. It emphasizes the need to forego discrimination, maintain respect for all clients, and to advocate for social justice.

The organization focuses its efforts on two major aspects of social work: professional practice and social advocacy. The NASW works to encourage social workers to adopt practices that lead to the ultimate goal of providing tangible services, effective counseling and psychotherapy, and assisting communities.

Each state has a chapter of the NASW, and there are also chapters in New York City, metropolitan Washington, D.C., Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, Guam, and an international chapter.

The NASW also runs a NASW Press in order to publish scholarly articles and monographs about social work. In addition to its official newsletter, the NASW Press runs the quarterly journal Social Work.

Advocacy and promoting social justice is another major focus of the NASW. It seeks to engage social workers with grassroots advocacy campaigns for federal legislation, candidate elections, and social reform. Some of the current political issues that the NASW is addressing include health care reform, immigration, and drug policy reform.

In order to keep social workers informed about ways that they can engage in advocacy campaigns, the NASW has organized a listserv for members so that the NASW government relations staff can keep members informed of different advocacy efforts. The NASW also runs a CapWiz system that allows social workers to email or send letters to their members of Congress.

In 2012, the NASW issued a document to the Obama administration entitled “Building on Progressive Priorities: Sustaining Our Nation’s Safety Net.” The document calls on the Obama administration to promote and encourage bipartisan approaches to seek sustainable and effective solutions to benefit Americans in need. It asks for the administration to invest in social work efforts, expand social work research, rebuild the economy, strengthen health care, advance the rights of women and disabled people, care for children and the elderly, and protect veterans and their families.

Beyond simply being an organization designed to unite social workers across the country, the NASW seeks to promote a code of ethics for all social workers as well as to promote activism amongst its members in order to improve the lives of people in need across the country. The NASW serves as a centralized and effective way for social workers to engage in activism, promote valuable legislation, and better serve the populations that need them the most.

Sarah Russell Cansler
Photo: White House