Advocacy as a Human Rights Enabler for Parents in the Child Protection System
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Abstract
Parents and guardians in child protection systems are in unequal
power relationships with child protection practitioners. This
relationship is experienced as exclusionary or even oppressive
by many parents and guardians. For families and communities
in the child protection system who experience intersectional
discrimination and disadvantage, such as people with intellectual
disabilities and First Nations people, this unequal relationship and
subsequent potential exclusion and oppression can be even more
profound. A growing body of literature indicates that advocacy
can assist in addressing unequal relationships in other contexts,
such as involuntary mental health. This paper explores the role of
representational advocacy in supporting parents in child
protection settings through a case study of an advocacy service
in Victoria, Australia. Using a human rights framework to guide
the analysis, the paper highlights how advocacy can help support
rights, but that broader structural change will be required to
consistently uphold the rights of parents.