
International Award for Social Work Academic
UKZN Social Work academic, Professor Johannes John-Langba, has been selected by the Howard University’s School of Social Work in the United States as the 2019 recipient of the Dr Inabel Burns Lindsay Social Work Education Leadership Award.
Lindsay was the first African-American woman to graduate from the University of Pittsburgh’s School of Social Work doctoral programme where John-Langba obtained his PhD degree.
An alumnus of Howard University, John-Langba is the first African to receive this prestigious acknowledgement and the eighth recipient of the award which honours Howard University Social Work graduates who exemplify the educational leadership of Lindsay, who is their founding Dean.
Said John-Langba: ‘It means a lot to me as a social work academic and is an affirmation of the quality of my academic leadership in social work education. I think I was selected because of my leadership in social work education on the African continent as well as for my contribution to promoting Howard University’s School of Social Work’s historic social justice mission.’
Dean of the School of Social Work at Howard University Professor Sandra Edmonds Crew added: ‘Professor John-Langba’s commitment to research, teaching and community services is clearly evident. We are excited to honour him for his demonstration of truth and service to his alma mater and the profession of social work.’
John-Langba has over 15 years of professional work experience at national and international levels in research, teaching and programme management related to social work, public health and social development. He has worked and/or conducted research in various contexts in many countries including Australia, Botswana, Ethiopia, East Jerusalem, Ghana, Kenya, Lesotho, Malawi, Namibia Rwanda, Sierra Leone, South Africa, eSwatini (formerly Swaziland), Tanzania, United States, Zimbabwe, and Zambia.
His current research interests include social aspects of HIV/AIDS; migrant health; sexual and gender-based violence; community level influences on antibiotic resistance; climate change and development; resiliency and xenophobic violence; mental health; and recidivism among youth offenders.
John-Langba is the recipient of various other awards and fellowships including a Population Policy Communication Fellowship (Population Reference Bureau, USA), Rand Institute Summer Fellowship (Rand Corporation, USA), Cairns Institute Fellow (James Cook University, Australia), African Peacebuilding Network research award (Social Science Research Council, USA), and was the 1999-2000 William H and Camille Cosby Fellow at Howard University in the United States for outstanding scholarship and achievement.
He is Vice-President and Mental Health Ambassador of Cape Mental Health (CMH) - the oldest community-based mental health agency in South Africa.
Words: Melissa Mungroo
Photograph: Supplied