Advocacy is about people—real lives, real challenges, and the right to be treated with dignity."
I am an independent and community advocate committed to social justice, equality, and ensuring that individuals and communities are heard, respected, and supported when navigating complex systems.
My work sits at the intersection of advocacy, rights, and community empowerment. I support people who are often pushed to the margins—those facing discrimination, systemic barriers, and decisions made without their voices at the table.
Alongside one-to-one advocacy, I work with communities to strengthen collective voice.
This includes supporting grassroots organising, delivering rights-based workshops, and helping communities challenge injustice together—whether that’s around housing, discrimination, or access to services.
Advocacy is not only individual. It is collective.
I work with individuals, families, community groups, and grassroots organisations. My services are particularly focused on supporting marginalised communities, including Disabled people, people in recovery, Gypsy, Roma and Traveller communities, migrants, and those experiencing housing injustice.
Where needed, I work alongside legal professionals, support services, and community organisations to ensure people receive the right support at the right time.
I do this work because too many people are expected to navigate systems that are confusing, exclusionary, and unfair—often at their most vulnerable moments.
I work with people who are:
Facing housing injustice or homelessness
Experiencing discrimination or unequal treatment
Living with disability or long-term health conditions
In recovery and rebuilding stability in their lives
Part of Gypsy, Roma and Traveller communities facing long-standing prejudice
Affected by immigration status and barriers to accessing services
Many of the people I support have been unheard for generations. Advocacy, for me, is about rebalancing power—standing alongside people so their voices carry weight in spaces where decisions are made.
My advocacy is independent, rights-based, and culturally competent.
I don’t speak for people—I work with them. I listen first, explain clearly, and support individuals and communities to make informed choices about their own lives.
My approach is:
Compassionate – grounded in empathy, respect, and care
Clear and honest – no jargon, no judgement
Trauma-aware – recognising how systems can retraumatise
Rooted in social justice – challenging inequality, not accepting it
I believe advocacy should feel accessible, not intimidating.