Progress of the social service professions in South Africa's developmental social welfare system : social work, and child and youth care work

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Authors

Gray, Mel
Lombard, A. (Antoinette)

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Wiley

Abstract

This paper examines the progress of the social service professions delivering developmental social welfare in South Africa, a subject we have followed closely over the last 20 years. Being policy-driven, developmental social welfare stemmed from expert social analyses that resulted in technically oriented solutions, including the broadening of social service professions. Twenty years on, it is hard to see developmental social welfare, as envisaged in government policy, in action, since the practice reality does not differ drastically from the prior apartheid system with the government's heavy reliance on social security as a poverty-alleviation measure. The expanded social security budget has led to underfunded services and a crisis for social service professionals. This paper focuses on the regulated professions of social workers, and child and youth care workers. Our examination of critical issues for these occupational groups revealed that South Africa still has a long way to go in building a strong social service workforce.

Description

DATA AVAILABILITY STATEMENT : Data sharing is not applicable to this article as no new data were created or analysed in this study.

Keywords

Child care, Youth care, Developmental social welfare, Social justice, Economic justice, Social welfare policy, Social work, South Africa (SA), Workforce issues in human services, SDG-08: Decent work and economic growth

Sustainable Development Goals

SDG-08:Decent work and economic growth

Citation

Gray, M., & Lombard, A.(2023). Progress of the social service professions in South Africa's developmental social welfare system: Social work, and child and youth carework. International Journal of Social Welfare, 32(4), 429–441. https://doi.org/10.1111/ijsw.12562.