Fr. 158.00

Children for Families or Families for Children - The Demography of Adoption Behavior in the U.S.

English · Paperback / Softback

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Description

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Do adoptions provide children for families or families for children? This book analyzes the complex interactions between adopters and adoptees using historical and current data. Who are the preferred parents and children, both domestically and internationally? How do the types of adoptions-domestic adoptions, private and public through the foster care system, and intercountry adoptions-differ? Domestic trends include a shift to open adoptions and a notable increase in "hard to place", foster care adoptions-typically older, siblings, minorities, with physical, educational, or emotional challenges. Adoptive parents are increasingly all ages (including grandparents); all types of marriages (single, married and same-sex couples); all income levels, with subsidized adoptions for children who would otherwise remain in foster or institutional care. Intercountry adoptions have followed waves, pushed by wars and political or economic crises in the sending country, and pulled by the increasing demand from the U. S. Currently there is a decrease in intercountry adoptions from Asia and Eastern Europe with a possible fifth wave from Africa with the greatest number from Ethiopia. This is a resource for family sociologists, demographers, social workers, advocates for children and adoptive parents, as well as those who are interested in the continuing research in adoptions.

List of contents

1: Adoption as a Support System for Orphaned, Abandoned, or Voluntary Placed Children,- 2: History: The Changing Face of Adoption,- 3: Sources of Adoption Data,- 4: Adoption Behavior of U.S. Women,- 5: Demographic and Social Issues of Same Sex Adoptions,- 6: Intercountry Adoption to the United States,- 7: Intercountry Adoption: A Quantitative Analysis,- 8: Global Intercountry Adoption,- 9: Conclusions.

Summary

Do adoptions provide children for families or families for children? This book analyzes the complex interactions between adopters and adoptees using historical and current data. Who are the preferred parents and children, both domestically and internationally? How do the types of adoptions-domestic adoptions, private and public through the foster care system, and intercountry adoptions-differ? Domestic trends include a shift to open adoptions and a notable increase in "hard to place", foster care adoptions-typically older, siblings, minorities, with physical, educational, or emotional challenges. Adoptive parents are increasingly all ages (including grandparents); all types of marriages (single, married and same-sex couples); all income levels, with subsidized adoptions for children who would otherwise remain in foster or institutional care.  Intercountry adoptions have followed waves, pushed by wars and political or economic crises in the sending country, and pulled by the increasing demand from the U. S.  Currently there is a decrease in intercountry adoptions from Asia and Eastern Europe with a possible fifth wave from Africa with the greatest number from Ethiopia. This is a resource for family sociologists, demographers, social workers, advocates for children and adoptive parents, as well as those who are interested in the continuing research in adoptions.

Additional text

The book is a valuable attempt to offer a documented response to a relatively long list of questions about adoption patterns, which usually remian unanswered.
European Journal of Population 28:2 (2012)

Report

The book is a valuable attempt to offer a documented response to a relatively long list of questions about adoption patterns, which usually remian unanswered.
European Journal of Population 28:2 (2012)

Product details

Authors Mary Ann Davis
Publisher Springer Netherlands
 
Languages English
Product format Paperback / Softback
Released 11.09.2013
 
EAN 9789400737938
ISBN 978-94-0-073793-8
No. of pages 220
Dimensions 155 mm x 235 mm x 12 mm
Weight 365 g
Illustrations XVI, 220 p.
Series The Springer Series on Demographic Methods and Population Analysis
The Springer Series on Demographic Methods and Population Analysis
Subjects Social sciences, law, business > Sociology > Sociological theories

C, Sociology, Family, biotechnology, Social Sciences, Sociology, general, Family Law, families, Population & demography, Demography, Population and Demography, Families—Social aspects

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