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Saving International Adoption - An Argument from Economics and Personal Experience (Hardcover)
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Saving International Adoption - An Argument from Economics and Personal Experience (Hardcover)
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International adoption is in a state of virtual collapse, rates
having fallen by more than half since 2004 and continuing to fall.
Yet around the world millions of orphaned and vulnerable children
need permanent homes, and thousands of American and European
families are eager to take them in. Many government officials,
international bureaucrats, and social commentators claim these
adoptions are not ""in the best interests"" of the child. They
claim that adoption deprives children of their ""birth culture,""
threatens their racial identities, and even encourages widespread
child trafficking. Celebrity adopters are publicly excoriated for
stealing children from their birth families. This book argues that
opposition to adoption ostensibly based on the well-being of the
child is often a smokescreen for protecting national pride.
Concerns about the harm done by transracial adoption are largely
inconsistent with empirical evidence. As for trafficking, opponents
of international adoption want to shut it down because it is too
much like a market for children. But this book offers a radical
challenge to this view-that is, what if instead of trying to
suppress market forces in international adoption, we embraced them
so they could be properly regulated? What if the international
system functioned more like open adoption in the United States,
where birth and adoptive parents can meet and privately negotiate
the exchange of parental rights? This arrangement, the authors
argue, could eliminate the abuses that currently haunt
international adoption. The authors challenge the prevailing wisdom
with their economic analyses and provocative analogies from other
policy realms. Based on their own family's experience with the
adoption process, they also write frankly about how that process
feels for parents and children.
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