African American Church Social Entrepreneurship as Macro Social Work
Author(s) -
Dorrance Kennedy,
Mark R. Marquez,
Quienton I. Nichols,
Dennis Corbin,
Chester D. Dilday
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
journal of sociology and social work
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2333-5815
pISSN - 2333-5807
DOI - 10.15640/jssw.v6n1a2
Subject(s) - sociology , african american , perspective (graphical) , social work , work (physics) , macro , social change , social entrepreneurship , gender studies , entrepreneurship , political science , anthropology , law , visual arts , art , mechanical engineering , computer science , programming language , engineering
As does the profession of Social Work, the African American church has a long history of taking active roles in helping communities in times of social change. Given this commonality and because the African American church has repeatedly demonstrated what could reasonably be considered successful macro social work, it is believed that social workers would benefit from being informed about African American church community involvement from a macro social work perspective. The concept is explored through a discussion of African American Church Social Entrepreneurship as a macro social work response to African American community gentrification.
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