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Submission Number: 275
Submission ID: 1545
Submission UUID: cb22477a-e2d1-4282-aa04-030ed05fa404
Submission URI: /2025/abstracts

Created: Mon, 07/28/2025 - 11:22
Completed: Mon, 07/28/2025 - 11:34
Changed: Sun, 08/10/2025 - 20:30

Remote IP address: 105.185.57.236
Submitted by: Anonymous
Language: English

Is draft: No
Current page: Complete
Webform: Abstract
Title Dr.
Lastname Damons
Firstname Mary-ann
eMail maryanndamons7@gmail.com
Mobile 0799125428
Institution None
Biosketch Registered social worker
Is there a Second Presenter? Yes
Title Prof.
Lastname Nkoane
Firstname Molebatse Milton
eMail mnkoane@cut.ac.za
Mobile 076 982 6901
Institution Central University of Technology
Biosketch Research Professor in the Faculty of Humanities, Department of Postgraduate Studies in Education, Central University of Technology, Bloemfontein.
Is there a Third Presenter? No
Title of Presentatation Reimagining Social Work through Afrocentric Lenses: A Multi-Perspectival and Transdisciplinary Approach
Theme Selection THEME 4: Social Work Education, Transdisciplinarity and Curriculum Development
Subtheme FOUR Selection SUB 4.2 Strategies on building responsive social work curricula.
Select your Presentation Type Oral Presentation
Abstract This paper interrogates the conceptual foundations and practical implications of integrating an Afrocentric lens into social work education. It proposes a multi-dimensional, multi-perspectival framework that enhances transdisciplinary collaboration to enrich curriculum development and pedagogical strategies responsive to the complexities of African realities. This paper is grounded within Africana Critical Theory (ACT); the lens seeks to transcend social identities and foster an African consciousness that resists binary thinking and racial essentialism. This framework is developed through voluntary collaboration among a diverse transdisciplinary team; it emerged from sustained dialogue, critical reflection, and reflexive action, employing Participatory Action Research (PAR) as a research approach and Critical Discourse Analysis (CDA) as an analytic technique. The literature underscores the limitations of reducing African identity to a singular Black ethnic experience and critiques traditional notions of community. Key findings reveal contextual challenges, including a disconnect from lived realities, which contributes to the inadequacy of responses to post-apartheid social, ideological, and cultural tensions. These findings highlight the urgent need for a shared humanity, re-humanisation, and mutual humanisation. Importantly, the philosophy of Ubuntu is shown not to be exclusively African but to derive its significance from Africa’s historical and global context. The paper advocates for Africana critical theorisation and Afrocentric conceptualisation in social work education, practice, and policy. It positions this framework as a vital component of macro-transformative strategies aimed at fostering holistic development and advancing social justice.

Keywords: Afrocentric social work, African realities, African identity, African consciousness, Ubuntu, transdisciplinary
Title Dr
Firstname Ntandoyenkosi
Lastname Maphosa
Does the Abstract fit the selected Theme? Yes
What Area does this Abstract Focus on? Education
Status Accepted
Title Mr
Firstname Luvuyo
Lastname Teko
Does the Abstract fit the selected Theme? Yes
What Area does this Abstract Focus on? Education
Status Accepted