BCSSW contributors to Grand Challenges for Social Work and Society (left to right): Erika Sabbath, Ruth McRoy, Stephanie Berzin, Jacquelyn James, Rocio Calvo, Jim Lubben, and Christina Matz-Costa. Not pictured: Carrie Johnson. (Photo courtesy Gary Wayne Gilbert).

BCSSW contributors to Grand Challenges for Social Work and Society (left to right): Erika Sabbath, Ruth McRoy, Stephanie Berzin, Jacquelyn James, Rocio Calvo, Jim Lubben, and Christina Matz-Costa. Not pictured: Carrie Johnson. (Photo courtesy Gary Wayne Gilbert).

This month, Oxford University Press releasedĀ , a scholarly review of the national initiative from the American Academy of Social Work and Social Welfare (AASWSW). The book is co-edited by Boston College School of Social Work Louise McMahon Ahearn Endowed ProfessorĀ James LubbenĀ and features the perspectives and research findings of eight BCSSW faculty and staff members.

The book presents an account of the origins of the Grand Challenges in Social Work, in which Lubben played an integral role, while offering individual chapters on the 12 Challenges written by the lead researchers associated with each Challenge. The book also makes the case for the field of social work’s unique opportunity to address each of the Challenges, presenting concrete ways for practitioners and researchers to get involved.

ā€œPart of the Grand Challenges effort is to bridge silos of scholarship with practice, and the good news is, all of the important players within our field are involved in making this happen, including theĀ ,Ģż,Ģż, andĀ ,ā€ explains Lubben, who is a member of theĀ Ā . ā€œBut we also recognize that no one profession can solve these large issues by themselves. This initiative calls for us to work hand in hand with other fields in order to create lasting change.ā€

Stephanie Berzin, associate professor and assistant dean of the BCSSW doctoral program, is an author on the chapter on ā€œHarnessing Technology for Social Good,ā€ and one of a group of national network leader on the various initiatives, a role that charges her with moving forward opportunities to go beyond the contents of the book. Seven BCSSW faculty and staff have assumed such Grand Challenges leadership roles.

Grand Challenges for Social Work and Society

Grand Challenges for Social Work and Society

ā€œThe Boston College School of Social Work’s leadership in this initiative signifies our faculty commitment to these issues and to the future direction of our field,ā€ says Berzin. ā€œIt gives our students access not only to the direction of where social work is headed, but to the scholars who lead that conversation.Ā These challenges are critical for our field and for our world.Ā These challenges are about developing a better, more just society, and they provide an outline to begin that work.ā€

In addition to Lubben and Berzin, Co-director of the Center on Aging and WorkĀ Jacquelyn JamesĀ and Assistant ProfessorĀ Christina Matz-CostaĀ contributed to the chapter ā€œAdvance Long and Productive Livesā€ and are national network leaders for the initiative of the same name. Assistant ProfessorĀ Erika SabbathĀ and Carrie Johnson, Assistant Director of Boston College’sĀ Institute on Aging, wrote on ā€œEradicate Social Isolation;ā€ Sabbath is a network leader. And Donahue and DiFelice Professor of Social WorkĀ Ruth McRoyĀ and Associate ProfessorĀ RocĆ­o CalvoĀ are authors and network leaders on ā€œAchieve Equal Opportunity and Justice.ā€

To learn more about all of the 12 Challenges through policy briefs and working papers,Ģż