“…Failure to explicitly discuss the role of an ethical perspective, and the contexts of history and power structures, in the conceptualization of social good becomes especially problematic when social good is presented as an element essential to macro social work practice. Macro social work practice consists of efforts to address problems, alleviate suffering, and enact social justice through work in broad systems including communities, organizations, and society at large (Hill, Ferguson, & Erickson, 2010; McBeath, 2016; Rothman, 2013). This work often takes the form of advocacy, community organizing, policy work, organizational leadership and administration, and community resource development (Hill et al, 2010; McBeath, 2016; Rothman, 2013) and is recognized as being “rooted in the profession’s historic mission to promote social justice through social change” (Mor Barak, 2018, p. 3).…”