Policy Press
Eight Advocacy and consumer participation
Abstract
Until very recently, no-one would believe the abuse and harm that had been done to us! The awfulness we experienced as children has cast long shadows over our adult lives. (Care Leavers Australia Network1)
Over the past 15 years, Care Leavers Australia Network (CLAN) has been instrumental in the development of social policy responses to adult care-leavers in Australia. CLAN has engaged in a range of advocacy activities, including regular protests about the treatment of adult care-leavers in Australia and the lack of support for them. In their protest brochure, from which the above quotation is derived, they point to the need for the wider community to understand their experiences of care and its aftermath, a change that is occurring at the time of writing due to publicity surrounding the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse.
This chapter is concerned with the ways in which adult care-leavers and advocacy organisations such as CLAN have been involved in bringing about social policy changes. Two ways are considered: advocacy and consumer participation. Both involve the engagement of adult care-leavers in social policy processes to ensure the inclusion of their perspectives, with the aim of creating ‘opportunities for change … through active citizenship and participation in decision-making around the issues that affect them’.2 With advocacy, adult care-leavers lead and attempt to influence social policy from ‘outside’; in contrast, consumer participation entails working on the ‘inside’ in the social policy processes. Advocates may, of course, also be consumer participants.
Advocacy can involve work with individuals (sometimes known as case advocacy) or collectives (cause advocacy) to bring about change.
Abstract
Until very recently, no-one would believe the abuse and harm that had been done to us! The awfulness we experienced as children has cast long shadows over our adult lives. (Care Leavers Australia Network1)
Over the past 15 years, Care Leavers Australia Network (CLAN) has been instrumental in the development of social policy responses to adult care-leavers in Australia. CLAN has engaged in a range of advocacy activities, including regular protests about the treatment of adult care-leavers in Australia and the lack of support for them. In their protest brochure, from which the above quotation is derived, they point to the need for the wider community to understand their experiences of care and its aftermath, a change that is occurring at the time of writing due to publicity surrounding the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse.
This chapter is concerned with the ways in which adult care-leavers and advocacy organisations such as CLAN have been involved in bringing about social policy changes. Two ways are considered: advocacy and consumer participation. Both involve the engagement of adult care-leavers in social policy processes to ensure the inclusion of their perspectives, with the aim of creating ‘opportunities for change … through active citizenship and participation in decision-making around the issues that affect them’.2 With advocacy, adult care-leavers lead and attempt to influence social policy from ‘outside’; in contrast, consumer participation entails working on the ‘inside’ in the social policy processes. Advocates may, of course, also be consumer participants.
Advocacy can involve work with individuals (sometimes known as case advocacy) or collectives (cause advocacy) to bring about change.
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Front Matter i
- Contents v
- List of abbreviations vi
- List of tables, figures and boxes vii
- Introduction 1
- Care and its aftermath 13
- Public inquiries 37
- Apologies, memorials and other acknowledgements 65
- Reparation and redress 87
- Specialist support 111
- Access to records and family reunification 133
- Advocacy and consumer participation 161
- Good practice in supporting adult care-leavers 183
- Notes and references 197
- Select bibliography 247
- Index 265
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Front Matter i
- Contents v
- List of abbreviations vi
- List of tables, figures and boxes vii
- Introduction 1
- Care and its aftermath 13
- Public inquiries 37
- Apologies, memorials and other acknowledgements 65
- Reparation and redress 87
- Specialist support 111
- Access to records and family reunification 133
- Advocacy and consumer participation 161
- Good practice in supporting adult care-leavers 183
- Notes and references 197
- Select bibliography 247
- Index 265