The Market Forces in AdoptionThe controversies in adoption have extended across a spectrum of policy and practice issues, and although the issues have become clear, resolution has not been achieved nor has consensus developed regarding a framework on which to improve the quality of adoption policy and practice. This book is the second in a series to use an ethics-based framework for analyzing and resolving these complex challenges in adoption while avoiding the divisiveness that has heretofore impeded their resolution. This book considers various aspects of the business of adoption in terms of market factors. With the shifting demographics of infant adoption, international adoption, and special needs adoption, issues are raised in this book about the role of money in adoption, who holds the "power" in adoption, and to whom adoption professionals are accountable. Questions examined in the book include the extent to which there has been a commodification of children placed with adoptive families, how the adoption process is regulated and by whom, the impact of resources on the roles of birth and adoptive parents, the relevance of accountability in adoption, and how market forces undermine ethical adoption practice. The book concludes by noting that although powerful market forces are in play, professionals from all fields of adoption are raising questions about the ethics of current practice and are challenging policies that may have been tolerated, and therefore, the environment may be ready for reshaping the forces that drive adoption. (Contains 194 references.) (KB) |
Contents
Market Forces in Foster | 67 |
The Role of Marketing | 105 |
References | 123 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
adop adopt children adoption agencies adoption assistance adoption of children adoption of infants adoption services adoption subsidy adoptive families adoptive placements adults advertising African American African American children ASFA associated attorneys baby birth mothers birth parents black market Bouwma Caucasian charged Child Welfare children for adoption children in foster children of color children with special Children's Defense Fund Donaldson Adoption Institute eligibility environment ethical Evans extent families for children federal foster care foster parents Georgia Tann Gritter Human Services illegal impact income increasing independent adoption infant adoption intercountry adoption international adoption practice Internet Mansnerus 1998 market forces number of children parental rights place their children policy and practice postadoption services prospective adoptive parents race recruitment role of money social special needs adoption suggest supply of adoptive tax credit termination of parental tion tional adoption tive transracial adoption U.S. Department waiting children Zelizer