Alford honored as an NASW Social Work Pioneer

Keith A. Alford.

Keith A. Alford, PhD, dean of the UB School of Social Work. Photo: Onion Studio

The award, one of social work’s top honors, recognizes Alford’s pioneering contributions to children, families and the profession

By Matthew Biddle

Published October 8, 2025

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“As social workers, we know our mission is to uplift others and to continually strive toward improving the human condition. This honor renews my resolve to stay the course. ”
University at Buffalo School of Social Work

BUFFALO, N.Y. — The National Association of Social Workers (NASW) has named Keith A. Alford, PhD, dean of the University at Buffalo School of Social Work, an NASW Social Work Pioneer, one of the profession’s highest honors.

The NASW Social Work Pioneers® program honors social workers who have enriched their profession and improved social and human conditions through their dedication, commitment and determination.

Alford will be inducted as a Pioneer at the NASW National Conference in June 2026 in Washington, D.C.

“I am deeply grateful for this recognition,” Alford says. “As social workers, we know our mission is to uplift others and to continually strive toward improving the human condition. This honor renews my resolve to stay the course. Our work is never finished, and our determination must remain steadfast.”

As a young man in South Carolina, Alford was inspired to pursue a social work career, focused on social and racial justice, by Whitney M. Young Jr., a social worker and advisor to multiple U.S. presidents, and Dorothy Height, a prominent civil rights activist. Since then, he has devoted his professional life to serving and researching the needs of children and families. His life’s work reflects his commitment to social work values and to diversity, equity, inclusion and accessibility.

Since being appointed dean of the UB School of Social Work in 2021, Alford has led the school through a period of continued growth and stability.

Central to Alford’s leadership philosophy is, as he puts it, the idea that, “To be trauma-informed, one has to be racially informed.” Following the racially motivated mass shooting in Buffalo on May 14, 2022, Alford facilitated programs that allowed students, faculty, staff and community members to engage in meaningful dialogue. To mark the massacre’s one-year anniversary, he led the coordination of an online seminar on Black racial trauma, proving space for attendees to grieve and reflect. Now, Alford is steering the integration of racial trauma into the school’s established trauma-informed and human rights framework.

In his research, Alford studies culturally specific service delivery for special populations, family mental health, rites of passage programming for adolescent African American males, kinship care and child welfare interventions.

His work has appeared in numerous social work journals and has been supported by grants from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Administration for Children and Families, New York State Office of Mental Health, U.S. Defense Intelligence Agency and the Gifford Foundation. Notably, he was part of a national Intelligence Community Center for Academic Excellence to enhance diversity in the intelligence field and was a co-investigator on a project funded by the National Science Foundation to support the training of diverse undergraduates in conducting trauma research with veterans.

Before coming to UB, Alford served in multiple roles at Syracuse University, including as its first chief diversity and inclusion officer, a member of the chancellor’s executive team, professor of social work, director of the School of Social Work, MSW director and BSSW director.

Alford holds a PhD and Master of Social Work from the College of Social Work at The Ohio State University, as well as a bachelor’s degree in history and sociology from Coker University.

Media Contact Information

Matthew Biddle
Director of Communications and Marketing
School of Social Work
Tel: 716-645-1226
mrbiddle@buffalo.edu