“…Social workers were not parted from this process, nor was Portuguese social work unaffected by the 1974-1976 Revolutionary spiral. A wide variety of sources points to the involvement of social workers in nearly all the fronts of revolutionary action (urban residents' movements, adult education programmes, labour unions' organisation, progressive housing programmes, direct democracy initiatives, organisation of cooperatives, workers' control, etc…), and to the impact of the Revolution in the academic curricula, in the supervision of internship practice, and in the theoretical as well as praexeological edifice of Portuguese social work (Fernandes, 1985;Negreiros, Andrade, & Queirós, 1992;Santos & Martins, 2016;Silva, 2016).…”