The Social Work Research Group/NASW Research Section/Council on Social Work Research, 1949-1965: An emerging research identity in the American profession
Jr. Graham et al., The Social Work Research Group/NASW Research Section/Council on Social Work Research, 1949-1965: An emerging research identity in the American profession, RES SOC W P, 10(5), 2000, pp. 622-643
Objective: To determine major themes and significance of the Social Work Re
search Group (SWRG), founded in 1949.
Methods: Archival research, principally at Social Welfare History Archives,
University of Minnesota; oral historical interviews of key informants.
Results: The Social Work Research Group (SWRG), founded in 1949, fostered r
esearch within the profession by creating an organization representing and
promoting social work research, advancing the place of research in teaching
and scholarship, and establishing what ultimately became Social Work Abstr
acts. It was one of seven organizations leading to the 1955 creation of the
National Association of Social Workers (NASW). Retaining NASW status, the
SWRG (renamed NASW Research Section in 1955 and then Council on Social Work
Research in 1963) moved from an earlier preoccupation with membership crit
eria and the place of research within the profession to conceptualizing and
promoting research as an established social work method.
Conclusion: In doing so, the SWRG laid ground work for the contemporary soc
ial work research movement.