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TARGET ARTICLE

Ethical Advocacy Across the Autism Spectrum: Beyond Partial Representation

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Abstract

Recent debates within the autism advocacy community have raised difficult questions about who can credibly act as a representative of a particular population and what responsibilities that role entails. We attempt to answer these questions by defending a set of evaluative criteria that can be used to assess the legitimacy of advocacy organizations and other nonelectoral representatives. With these criteria in hand, we identify a form of misrepresentation common but not unique to autism advocacy, which we refer to as partial representation. Partial representation occurs when an actor claims to represent a particular group of people but appropriately engages with only a subset of that group. After highlighting symbolic and substantive harms associated with partial representation, we propose several strategies for overcoming it.

This article is referred to by:
Neurodiversity and Autism Advocacy: Who Fits Under the Autism Tent?
Meaningful Fissures: The Value of Divergent Agendas in Patient Advocacy
Representing the Autism Spectrum
Like Autism, Representation Falls on a Spectrum
Civic Engagement, Autism and Deliberative Democracy: Prioritizing the Inclusion of Marginalized Perspectives
A Care Ethics Approach to Ethical Advocacy for Community Conditions
Beyond Autism: Advocacy for Neurodevelopmental Differences
Additional Challenges to Fair Representation in Autistic Advocacy
Representation Is Never Perfect, But Are Parents Even Representatives?
Non-Electoral Representation and Promoting Welfare—Beyond Descriptive Representation
Autistic Self Advocacy in the Developmental Disability Movement
Hope Springs Eternal: Pitfalls of Partial Representation by Advocates Who Only Want the Best
Autism Advocacy Before and After DSM-5
Parents of Autistic Children Are Deserving of Support
Patient Representation: Mind the Gap Between Individual and Collective Claims
Ethical Representation by Patient Advocacy Organizations Also Requires Responsible Management of Potential Financial Conflicts of Interest

Disclosure Statement

One author (Lutz) has a child with autism.

Notes

1 Throughout the article we use identity-first language (e.g., autistic person, autistic adult), which tends to be preferred by autistic self-advocates, rather than person-first language (e.g., person with autism), which tends to be preferred by caregivers and family members (Haller Citation2016). Our intention is to respect the preferences of autistic self-advocates engaged in discussions about representation, though we do not mean to suggest that either type of terminology is categorically preferable.

2 The terms “high-functioning” and “low-functioning” have historically defined categories of autism for research and policy. More recently, however, there has been increasing concern that these terms may be stigmatizing and that they reduce the diversity of abilities and challenges associated with the spectrum to a single dimension. As such, we avoid using these terms.

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