Social workers advocate for policies and practices that protect human rights and promote social, racial, economic, and environmental justice. This includes engaging in evidence-informed practice, participating in policy advocacy, and taking action at multiple system levels to address inequities.
As an advanced generalist social worker, I promote awareness of how policies and systems shape access to safety, stability, and basic needs. I apply evidence-informed strategies to reduce barriers and increase equity at the individual, family, group, organizational, community, and policy levels.
Evidence of Practice
During my MSW program at Southern Adventist University, I engaged in both coursework and field experiences that strengthened my ability to advance human rights and justice through advocacy, policy analysis, and professional social action strategies.
2.1 – Promote awareness of human rights and social, racial, economic, and environmental justice through social action strategies in professional practice.
Course Evidence: Final-Policy-Portfolio
In SOCW-609, I promoted awareness of social and economic injustice related to poverty by translating policy research into an advocacy-focused policy analysis with clear, action-oriented recommendations. Rather than only analyzing the TANF policy problem, I communicated how benefit levels and policy restrictions create barriers to meeting basic needs and sustaining family stability.
Human rights and justice issue: I identified the human rights concern as barriers to basic needs and stability (e.g., the ability of families to secure adequate food, housing stability, and safety) and framed the issue as one of economic justice, including the disproportionate impact on low-income caregivers and children.
Social action strategy and audience: I used the policy analysis assignment as a social action strategy by producing a stakeholder-oriented policy document that could be used to raise awareness and support advocacy efforts. I promoted awareness by presenting the problem in accessible language and proposing evidence-based solutions intended for audiences positioned to influence change, such as policy stakeholders, agency leadership, and community advocates.
Through this assignment, I strengthened my ability to promote justice by clearly naming inequities, identifying who is affected, and communicating practical policy solutions that reduce barriers and support dignity and well-being.
Field Evidence: DFCS Foster Care Resource Advocacy Documentation
In field practice, I engaged in professional advocacy and coordination efforts to reduce barriers impacting children and families. I supported equitable access to resources through systems navigation, professional communication, and documentation of advocacy actions aimed at improving safety, stability, and service connection. I did this by direct contact with case workers and social services supervisors. Here are some case examples:
Social Work Knowledge Used:
Across both SOCW-609 and DFCS field practice, I applied policy and advocacy knowledge to advance human rights and justice. In SOCW-609, I used policy analysis knowledge (problem definition, stakeholder impact, and evidence-based recommendations) to connect Tennessee TANF policy design to real-world barriers families face in meeting basic needs. In field practice, I used child welfare and resource-navigation knowledge to identify system barriers affecting foster children and caregivers and to advocate for timely access to services, stability supports, and safety-related resources through documented professional outreach and follow-up.
Social Work Values Present:
Social justice and dignity and worth of the person guided how I framed TANF policy inequities as barriers to basic needs and stability, rather than individual failings. Service and the importance of human relationships shaped my DFCS advocacy efforts through consistent, professional collaboration with caseworkers and supervisors to reduce barriers for children and families. Integrity and competence guided my use of accurate documentation, professional communication, and evidence-informed recommendations to support equitable access and systems accountability.
Social Work Skills Presented:
In SOCW-609, I demonstrated policy advocacy and social action communication skills by synthesizing research into a stakeholder-oriented policy product that clearly communicated inequities, identified the populations most impacted, and presented actionable, evidence-informed recommendations intended to raise awareness and support systems change. In my DFCS field practice, I applied systems navigation and resource advocacy skills through professional outreach, coordination, and follow-up with caseworkers and supervisors to connect children and families to needed resources and services. Across both settings, I strengthened professional documentation skills by maintaining clear, organized written records of needs identified, barriers encountered, advocacy actions taken, and next steps, supporting continuity of care, accountability, and more equitable outcomes.
Cognitive Processes:
I used critical thinking to move from “what the policy says” to “what families experience.” In SOCW-609, I identified how TANF rules and benefit adequacy can create predictable barriers to stability and used evidence to justify practical policy improvements. In field practice, I assessed barriers in real time, prioritized needs connected to safety and stability, and chose advocacy steps that matched the system context (who to contact, what information to share, what documentation was needed, and how to follow up). I also considered feasibility, choosing strategies that could realistically reduce barriers within agency and community systems.
Affective Processes:
I demonstrated persistence and professional responsibility by continuing advocacy efforts when barriers delayed access to services or resources. I used empathy and a human rights lens to remain client-centered and nonjudgmental when working with families experiencing poverty and instability. I also maintained professional composure and respectful collaboration during outreach with caseworkers and supervisors, recognizing that effective systems-level advocacy depends on relationship-building while still pushing for equitable outcomes.
Theoretical Foundation:
My work was grounded in Systems Theory and a Human Rights framework. Systems Theory guided my understanding that inequities are produced and maintained through interactions among policy, agencies, and resource systems, seen in SOCW-609 through how TANF policy structures shape access to stability, and in DFCS field practice through how child welfare processes and community resources interact to either support or obstruct timely services. A Human Rights framework informed my focus on access to basic needs and stability as foundational rights, especially the right to safety, adequate living conditions, and dignity, strengthening my commitment to advocacy actions that reduce systemic barriers for children and families.
