Citizen advocacy - a way to make a positive difference

- In the past learning disabled people were not valued by society. They were put away in large hospitals called institutions. They were treated badly.
- Now services can do harm to the people they support. Services have the power and control. They can get caught up in rigid ways of working. This can lead them to abuse the people they support. Funding cuts are making things worse.
- Citizen advocacy was set up by Wolf Wolfensberger to help to stop services doing harm to people.
- Citizen advocacy is where a volunteer stands beside a learning disabled person and gets to know them well. The citizen advocate values their advocate partner. They speak up for their partner. This can help their advocate partner to get better support. It can stop abuse.
- Julie and Barbara: about our citizen advocacy partnership.
- A positive difference: Now more paid advocates help people. But this help is short term and paid advocates are part of services. Citizen advocates are volunteers so working practices don't get in the way. Citizen advocates meet the long term needs of their partners. Citizen advocates can stop abuse and they can stop abuse from developing.
View Barbara's PowerPoint presentation (PPT)