English
Verb
advocating
- present participle of advocate
Advocacy is the act of arguing on behalf of a
particular issue, idea, person or animal. An advocate is someone
who does this. Both the terms advocate and advocacy have specialist
meanings in certain contexts, and among some groups. For
instance:
In a legal/law context: An 'advocate' is the
title of a specific person who is authorised/appointed (in some
way) to speak on behalf of a person in a legal process. See
advocate.
In a political context: An 'advocacy group' is an
organized collection of people who seek to influence political
decisions and policy, without seeking election to public office.
See
interest
group.
In a social care context: Both terms (and more
specific ones such as 'independent advocacy') are used in the UK in
the context of a network of interconnected organisations and
projects which seek to benefit people who are in difficulty
(primarily in the context of disability and mental health).
In the context of inclusion: Citizen Advocacy
organisations (citizen advocacy programmes) seek to cause benefit
by reconnecting people who have become isolated. Their practice was
defined in two key documents: CAPE, and Learning from Citizen
Advocacy Programs. See
Citizen Advocacy organisations.
In a marketing context: The word advocate is used
to describe a loyal client that recommends a product or service to
their peers.
advocating in Japanese: アドボカシー
advocating in Russian: Адвокация
advocating in Serbian:
Заступање