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This book explores how public policy advocacy can be used to approach policy issue identification and resolution. In addition, it describes this type of advocacy by drawing on participatory action research, including ethnographic and autoethnographic models. By applying these models to the situation of inmates with hearing loss in New Zealand's prisons, it identifies multiple causal factors for quality-of-life-limiting marginalisation, e.g. social barriers (e.g. disability discrimination); environmental limitations (e.g. geographical and those introduced by incarceration); and individual responses in line with negative attitudes - both social and political, including the State's denial of prisoners' right to democratic participation by revoking their right to vote in general elections after sentencing. In addition, two other areas, namely blood safety and broadcast media captioning, are highlighted, showing that the skill of auto-ethnography is transferrable and can be applied to ensure effective consumer advocacy for a diverse range of issues that affect marginalised sectors.