On the Historical and Conceptual Foundations of a Community Psychology of Social Transformation

Am J Community Psychol. 2017 Jun;59(3-4):284-294. doi: 10.1002/ajcp.12141. Epub 2017 May 4.

Abstract

We examine historical and conceptual literature in community psychology in order to understand the field's potential to be the socially transformative subdiscipline of psychology to which it aspires. By reviewing papers from two prominent journals and other literature, we conclude that the claim that community psychology is well-suited to social transformation, because it is a product of Sixties' radicalism and is theoretically equipped, is untenable. Systematic accounts of the subdiscipline's origins suggest that the transformative aspirations of current community psychologists do not correspond to the subdiscipline's reformist past. Furthermore, in analyzing three related concepts currently employed in the field-social justice, power, and praxis-we show that each suffers from conceptual ambiguity and a restricted political scope. These conceptual flaws, coupled with community psychology's historical inclination toward social reform, inhibit the possibility of contributing to radical social transformation. We conclude that neither questionable historical claims nor ambiguous and politically dubious concepts support a community psychology of social transformation. We offer solutions for the historical and conceptual problems we identify and, as a broader solution to the problem of engaging in socially transformative work, propose that community psychologists should seek direct political engagement in solidarity with other citizens as fellow citizens not as psychologists.

Keywords: Community psychology theory; Power; Praxis; Social justice; Social reform; Social transformation.

MeSH terms

  • Humans
  • Politics
  • Power, Psychological
  • Psychology, Social*
  • Residence Characteristics
  • Social Behavior
  • Social Change*
  • Social Environment
  • Social Justice*