Bridging The Gap (BTG) 40 Hour Practice Exam

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What is appropriate advocacy?

Supporting or acting in favor of a person or idea.

Advocacy is usually undertaken to help equalize an imbalance in power.

Advocacy is about ensuring someone who may have less voice or power can have a say in decisions that affect them. The best description emphasizes the purpose behind appropriate advocacy: it’s usually undertaken to help equalize an imbalance in power. When you advocate, you’re supporting or acting in a way that empowers the person or group to participate more fully, have their preferences respected, and access the resources or representation they need. This focus on balancing power helps explain why advocacy is used in contexts where people might be marginalized or unheard.

While advocating can involve supporting a person or an idea, its core aim is to address inequities in power, not simply to back any side. It isn’t something you should do in every situation without considering whether it respects autonomy and boundaries, and it isn’t aggression, since the goal is empowerment rather than coercion.

It is always appropriate to advocate in every situation.

Advocacy is a form of aggression.

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