NASW Foundation National
Programs
NASW Social Work Pioneers®
Joseph P. Anderson (1910-1979)
Due to his extraordinary vision and distinguished leadership, Joseph Anderson's
pioneering work achieved lasting results. The formation of the National Association of
Social Workers (NASW) and the Council on Social Work Education (CSWE) are, in themselves,
monuments to the pioneering work of Joseph (Joe) P. Anderson. During WW II, his persuasive
ability attained inclusion for social workers with the establishment of the Committee on
Social Work and Defense Mobilization. The magnitude of his leadership extended
internationally by ensuring social welfare policies were included in the charter of the
United Nations and rebuilding the International Conference on Social Work.
Anderson received his master's in social work from Case Western Reserve University
School of Applied Social Science in 1932. Early in his career, he directed a community
organization for a settlement house; administered an emergency relief organization; led
the Group Work Division of the Pittsburgh Health and Welfare Federation; directed
community relations for that city's housing authority; and served as chief of the Leasing
Occupancy Division of the Federal Public Housing Authority from 1941 to 1943.
As executive director of the American Association of Social Workers (AASW) in 1943, his
first challenge was dealing with the problems of social work in war time. His
persuasiveness with the War Manpower Commission led to organization of the Committee on
Social Work and Defense Mobilization where his efforts won long-delayed recognition for
the profession. He was prominently associated in the preparation of materials to ensure
inclusion of social welfare policies and programs in the charter of the United Nations.
After WWII he was instrumental in helping to rebuild the International Conference on
Social Work, and served as acting secretary general of this organization from 1947 to
1948.
It was his conviction about the importance of a unified social work profession that led
him to promote the development of a single membership association and to serve as the
primary staff person of the planning group for the new association. Largely through
Anderson's vision and guidance, seven associations merged in 1955 to form a single
membership body, NASW. He was the unanimous choice to become the first executive director
and acted as executive director from 1955 to 1969. At the time of his retirement he stated
that he had attended sixteen delegate assemblies, participated in 150 board meetings, and
made a thousand visits to chapters.
For several years prior to the establishment of CSWE, Anderson was secretary of one of
the predecessor organizations, the American Organization of Schools of Social Work, and
was instrumental in drafting the organizational plan for the Council.
Anderson's qualities of leadership and infinite energy led to many governmental and
voluntary organization consultant appointments. He was the Social Welfare Consultant to
the Department of State; an advisor on personnel and teaching for the Children's Bureau; a
member of the National Advisory Committee on the White House Conference on Aging; a member
of the Advisory Committee on International Activities of HEW; and an active planner of the
White House Conference on Children and Youth.
In 1962, Anderson was given a Distinguished Service Award by the National Conference on
Social Welfare for his outstanding contribution to the integration of the social work
profession into a single membership association. In 1967 his alma mater Case Western
Reserve University awarded him an honorary doctor of laws degree. |