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Can adoptive homes be found for non-white children? Will the
children and their new families be happy together though of
different race? Will they feel like a family? Originally published
in 1970, this book is an account of a four-year project in which
International Social Service of Great Britain joined with Bedford
College, London University, to provide a first-class adoption
service for babies born in Britain of diverse racial origins, and
to study the outcome of the adoptions. In addition, a survey sought
to determine the number of these children needing adoption homes,
and a nationwide Adoption Resource Exchange was established to
co-ordinate the efforts of the numerous agencies seeking parents
for them. The author examines the project’s experience of
interracial adoption and relates it to all good adoption practice.
This title was a welcome addition to the literature on adoption at
the time. It would have been indispensable to social work
practitioners and to students and lecturers on social work courses,
but it was more than a handbook for those professionally involved.
The book is well-informed and written with style and compassion:
many readers will be fascinated by the way in which children of
Asian, African, West-Indian and mixed parentage became integrated
into English families in spite of racial differences. It is a
success story. Today it can be read in its historical context. This
book is a re-issue originally published in 1970. The language used
is a reflection of its era and no offence is meant by the
Publishers to any reader by this re-publication.
How do adoptions really turn out? How do adopted children feel
about the family they were given and the opportunities they were
offered? To what extent do they fulfil their new parents’
expectations of them? And does it matter whether their adoption
grew out of a fostering relationship or was considered right from
the start as a permanent arrangement? Originally published in 1980,
the major follow-up study on which this book is based sought to
answer these questions. The research involved 160 sets of parents
and over 100 of their adopted children, now young adults. This was,
in fact, the largest group of adult adoptees anywhere in the world
to be interviewed and studied in a systematic way. As they look
back over their life together, the parents and the young people
explain what adopting or being adopted was like for them. This
title offers glimpses of adoptive family life over a period of more
than twenty years, compares the views of the young people with
those of their adopters and measures the factors which influenced
the various outcomes. Particular attention is paid to the basis on
which the child was originally placed, in order to shed light on
the controversial subject, at the time, of whether a preliminary
fostering period represents a useful safeguard. The information
gathered by Lois Raynor and her colleagues provided the feedback so
long sought by social work teachers and by those practising social
workers who had the responsibility for making long-term plans for
children and for approving foster home or adoption applications at
the time. Readers with personal experience of adoption will be
interested in making their own comparisons, while prospective
adopters will learn to avoid some pitfalls and to enjoy an adopted
child as their own.
Can adoptive homes be found for non-white children? Will the
children and their new families be happy together though of
different race? Will they feel like a family? Originally published
in 1970, this book is an account of a four-year project in which
International Social Service of Great Britain joined with Bedford
College, London University, to provide a first-class adoption
service for babies born in Britain of diverse racial origins, and
to study the outcome of the adoptions. In addition, a survey sought
to determine the number of these children needing adoption homes,
and a nationwide Adoption Resource Exchange was established to
co-ordinate the efforts of the numerous agencies seeking parents
for them. The author examines the project's experience of
interracial adoption and relates it to all good adoption practice.
This title was a welcome addition to the literature on adoption at
the time. It would have been indispensable to social work
practitioners and to students and lecturers on social work courses,
but it was more than a handbook for those professionally involved.
The book is well-informed and written with style and compassion:
many readers will be fascinated by the way in which children of
Asian, African, West-Indian and mixed parentage became integrated
into English families in spite of racial differences. It is a
success story. Today it can be read in its historical context. This
book is a re-issue originally published in 1970. The language used
is a reflection of its era and no offence is meant by the
Publishers to any reader by this re-publication.
How do adoptions really turn out? How do adopted children feel
about the family they were given and the opportunities they were
offered? To what extent do they fulfil their new parents'
expectations of them? And does it matter whether their adoption
grew out of a fostering relationship or was considered right from
the start as a permanent arrangement? Originally published in 1980,
the major follow-up study on which this book is based sought to
answer these questions. The research involved 160 sets of parents
and over 100 of their adopted children, now young adults. This was,
in fact, the largest group of adult adoptees anywhere in the world
to be interviewed and studied in a systematic way. As they look
back over their life together, the parents and the young people
explain what adopting or being adopted was like for them. This
title offers glimpses of adoptive family life over a period of more
than twenty years, compares the views of the young people with
those of their adopters and measures the factors which influenced
the various outcomes. Particular attention is paid to the basis on
which the child was originally placed, in order to shed light on
the controversial subject, at the time, of whether a preliminary
fostering period represents a useful safeguard. The information
gathered by Lois Raynor and her colleagues provided the feedback so
long sought by social work teachers and by those practising social
workers who had the responsibility for making long-term plans for
children and for approving foster home or adoption applications at
the time. Readers with personal experience of adoption will be
interested in making their own comparisons, while prospective
adopters will learn to avoid some pitfalls and to enjoy an adopted
child as their own.
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