

An edition of The helping tradition in the Black family and community (1985)
By Joanne Mitchell Martin
Publish Date
1985
Publisher
National Association of Social Workers
Language
eng
Pages
109
Description:
This book describes and documents the existence of the black helping tradition, and offers a theory regarding its origin, development, and decline. The book is based on research operating from the fundamental assumption that a pattern of black self-help activities developed from the black extended family, particularly the extended family's major elements of mutual aid, social-class cooperation, male-female equality, and prosocial behavior in children; and that the pattern of black self-help spread from the black extended family to institutions in the wider black community through fictive kinship and racial and religious consciousness.