Our jobs often do not allow us to devote 40 hours a week to working for social change, and life outside of work often doesn’t allow for a lot of spare time either. What you might be able to commit to, however, is to doing one simple action aimed at making a difference every week. These suggestions come from a list that some of us made up for a presentation; we’d love to hear your suggestions for more.

52 Simple Radical actions:

  1. Carve out a few hours in your work schedule every week to be radical. Justify it to your supervisor. Encourage the people you supervise to do the same.
  2. Find out who your local and national government representatives are, and write their addresses, phone numbers, fax numbers, and e-mail addresses in your Rolodex.
  3. Model taking good care of yourself.
  4. Find ways to ally yourself with (instead of only advocating for) your client.
  5. Include clients in organizational decision-making.
  6. Research your own effectiveness as a practitioner, and share the results with your colleagues.
  7. Read at least one relevant journal article per month.
  8. Go to a block club meeting in the neighborhood where you work or live, and encourage your clients to do the same.
  9. Always speak respectfully of clients. Don't give in to "client-bashing."
  10. Participate in Social Work Day at the Capitol.
  11. Keep clients informed of pending legislation that affects the services that they receive. Provide phone numbers of their legislators and encourage them to call and share their experiences.
  12. Inform clients about what avenues they can take if they are dissatisfied or especially pleased with your work.
  13. Don't ever apologize for being "just" a social worker.
  14. Evaluate your agency's intake forms and brochures to make sure they are friendly to diverse populations (i.e. appropriate demographic questions, non-parental caregivers, gay and lesbian families) and that they are easily understood. Do you really need all the information you ask for?
  15. Sign up for the SWAA and RSWSG e-mail listservs (see resource list).
  16. Be visible and vocal in your support for others who are trying to practice radical social work.
  17. Ask your clients for feedback on your job performance.
  18. Write a letter to your congressperson about a social justice issue that affects your clients.
  19. Meet with your congressperson to tell them about the type of work you do and the issues facing your clients.
  20. Pick up voter registration cards and put them in your agency’s lobby with a sign encouraging your clients to register.
  21. Ask your clients and co-workers if they’re registered to vote.
  22. Talk to your clients about political candidates and issues that could effect them in upcoming elections.
  23. Volunteer for a political campaign.
  24. Join the Radical Social Work Study Group, or start your own study group.
  25. Read David Gil’s Confronting Injustice and Oppression (1998, New York: Columbia University Press) and discuss it with someone (see resource list).
  26. Reject political neutrality and let other people know how you think.
  27. Start a self-help group for clients.
  28. Ally yourself with a service consumer organization such as the Alliance for the Mentally Ill or the Welfare Rights Committee.
  29. Subscribe to Session Weekly and Briefly, the publications of the Minnesota House of Representatives and Senate, to keep updated on what bills the legislature is considering. They’re free!
  30. Learn the rules so you can break them properly.
  31. Have a presentation and discussion about Radical social work at your staff meeting.
  32. Read Rules for Radicals by Saul Alinsky (see resource list).
  33. The next time a co-worker requests advice on how to address a client’s issue, recommend one thing they can do on the macro level to attempt to impact the social cause, i.e., call their legislator and ask what is being done about the housing crisis.
  34. Vote.
  35. Encourage others to vote.
  36. Keep informed about issues being decided in the legislature by signing up for an Action Alert list through organizations like Affirmative Options, The Children’s Defense Fund, Family and Children’s Services etc.
  37. Increase your own critical consciousness by serving meals at a soup kitchen on your lunch hour once a month.
  38. Talk politics in the lunchroom.
  39. Read one article in a journal or newspaper that relates to Radical social work and share your thoughts with a co-worker or family member.
  40. Read an article about cross-cultural practice and integrate a technique or tool into your everyday practice.
  41. Study global affairs and think about interdependence of all people in the world.
  42. Go to city hall or county offices and gather demographic information. Find out the economic level of the population in the area you serve and how many people live in poverty.
  43. Contact your local housing authority and find out what housing is available for the disadvantaged in your community.
  44. Join a local zoning and planning commission to make your voice heard about housing for the disadvantaged.
  45. Attend a county board meeting.
  46. Attend a city council meeting.
  47. Attend a meeting of your neighborhood organization.
  48. Form a Social Justice group in your church, synagogue or mosque.
  49. Meditate once a week on peace.
  50. Visit your children's schools and look at curriculum materials for social justice content.
  51. Find out what social action groups are operating in your work or home communities.
  52. Find an opportunity to collaborate with someone in your professional or home communities on social justice concerns.

If you have more suggestions for actions that you or others might take to be a little more radical, e-mail them to me and I'll add them to the list. My e-mail address is: nilsdybvig@yahoo.com

Additional Suggestions

  1. Write a letter to the editor
  2. Educate other social workers as to the importance of radical social work
  3. Back to the main page