Dictionary Definition
adoptive adj
1 of parents and children; related by adoption;
"adoptive parents" [ant: biological]
2 acquired as your own by free choice; "my
adopted state"; "an adoptive country" [syn: adopted] [ant: native]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Adjective
- Related through adoption; more generally,
relating to adoption.
- My adoptive parents recently got to know my biological parents.
Extensive Definition
Adoption is the legal act of permanently placing
a child with a parent or
parents other than the birth (or "biological") mother or father. An
adoption order has the effect of severing the parental
responsibilities and rights of the birth parent(s) and transferring
those responsibilities and rights to the adoptive parent(s). After
the finalization of an adoption, there is no legal difference
between adopted children and those born to the parents.
There are several kinds of adoption, which can be
defined both by effect - such as whether the adoption is open or
closed - and/or by location and the origin of the child, such as
domestic or international adoption. Each of these has its own
features and rules.
However, beyond the initial placement of the
child into adoption, there are continuing issues that surround
adoption, such as identity, search and reunion, language use,
media, and cultural views of adoption.
Degrees of openness
Openness in adoption refers to the legal governance of birth records and the informal relationships between the parties involved.National and state governments have enacted
varying laws to provide adopted individuals access to their birth
information. Some allow complete access while others seal all
records in perpetuity. The different legal structures for adoption
are referred to as either, “Open Record or Closed Record.”
Regardless, of the law, however, adoptions can
and have been arranged to allow ongoing contact between the parties
involved. The arrangements are referred to in popular culture as
either “open, semi-open, or closed adoption.”
Open adoption
Open, or fully disclosed, adoptions allow
adoptive parents, and often the adopted child, to interact directly
with biological kin. Communication may include letters, emails,
telephone calls, or visits. Direct access to the birth parents and
history has advantages of answering identity questions ("Who do I
look like? Why was I placed?") and lessening fantasies. There are
also disadvantages such as no clean break for assimilation into
family and the potential for feelings of rejection if contact
stops, or for playing families against each other.
Arrangements regarding contact are typically
informal. Even in an open adoption, legal rights of guardianship
are terminated, and the adoptive parents become the legal parents.
In some jurisdictions, the birth and adoptive parents may enter
into a binding agreement concerning visitation, exchange of
information, or other interaction regarding the child; however,
informal agreements are much more common.
Another aspect of openness in adoption is access
to unaltered birth certificates or other records. Such access is
not universal. However, a few jurisdictions, do provide automatic
rights to records. These include,
- United Kingdom: At age 18, those adopted are automatically entitled to their birth certificates and may access their adoption records.
- Germany: German-born children are allowed full access to their birth and adoption records. In many cases, biological family genealogical research is possible.
- US: people adopted in Alabama, Alaska, Delaware, Kansas, New Hampshire, and Oregon can access their birth certificates.
Semi-open adoption
In a semi-open adoption, the parents involved may meet one or several times and then have no more physical contact. Non-identifying letters and pictures may be exchanged directly or via a third party, such as an adoption agency, throughout the years. The relationship may remain semi-open or may evolve into open or closed.Closed adoption
In some closed adoptions, non-identifying
information is shared between the parties involved, such as medical
history, up to the point of placement. After the adoption is
legalized, no further information is shared between the parties
involved.
In other closed adoptions no information is
shared between the parties involved. This may occur because of the
law in the jurisdiction concerned, or court order, such as when a
child is removed from the home by the state because of abuse or neglect. It may also
occur because the parties involved do not want any contact.
Another trend in closed adoption concerns laws
passed by some U.S. states that allow infants to be placed at any
nearby hospital, fire department, or police station within 10 days
after birth, with no questions asked. However, such laws have been
criticized by adoptee advocacy organizations as being retrograde
and dangerous.
Types of adoption by location and origin
Domestic adoption
A domestic adoption is the placement of a child for adoption within the country in which he or she was born and normally resides. A special case is an interstate adoption - where an adoption occurs across state lines in the U.S., or within different Canadian provinces. In such cases, additional regulations may apply.Foster care adoption
seealso Foster careFoster care adoption is a type of domestic
adoption where the child is initially placed into a foster care
system and is subsequently placed for adoption. Children may be
placed into foster care for a variety of reasons, including removal
from the home by a governmental agency because of maltreatment.
Maltreatment can take the form of neglect or abuse. In most
adoptions regarding foster children, the foster parents decide to
adopt and become the legal parents. In some jurisdictions, adoptive
parents are licensed as and technically considered foster parents
while the adoption is being finalized. Altogether, of the 127,500
adoptions in the U.S. in 2001, about 51,000 occurred through the
foster care system.
Children with histories of maltreatment, such as
physical and psychological neglect, physical abuse, and sexual
abuse, are at risk of developing psychiatric problems. Such
children are at risk of developing a disorganized attachment.
Studies by Cicchetti et al (1990, 1995) found that 80% of abused
and maltreated infants in their sample exhibited disorganized
attachment styles. Disorganized attachment is associated with a
number of developmental problems, including dissociative symptoms,
as well as depressive, anxiety, and acting-out symptoms.
Intra-family adoption
Not all adoptions are from outside of the family. An intra-family adoption occurs when a child is adopted by an existing close family member and/or his or her partner. A common example is a "stepparent adoption", where the new partner of a parent may legally adopt a child from the parent's previous relationship. Intra-family adoption can also occur through surrender, as a result of parental death, or when the child cannot otherwise be cared for and a family member agrees to take over.International adoption
International adoption is the placing of a child
for adoption outside that child’s country of birth. The laws of
different countries vary in their willingness to allow
international adoptions. Some countries, such as China and Vietnam, have
relatively well-established rules and procedures for foreign
adopters to follow, while others, the United
Arab Emirates (UAE) for example, expressly forbid it. Some
countries, notably many African nations, have extended residency
requirements that in effect rule out most international adoptions.
And some countries such as Romania are closed
to international adoption altogether, with the exception of
adoptions by close relatives (such as grandparents).
Recognising some of the difficulties and
challenges associated with international adoption, and in an effort
to protect those involved from the corruption and exploitation
which sometimes accompanies it, the
Hague Conference on Private International Law developed the
Convention on Protection of Children and Co-operation in Respect of
Intercountry Adoption, which came into force on 1 May, 1995. To date it has
been ratified by 75 countries.
Reasons for adoption
Adoptions occur for many reasons. Adoptive parents may wish to adopt due to infertility, compassion for adoptees and to avoid passing on inheritable diseases. A minority of adoptees are orphans. Another reason could be where a child is found abandoned and family cannot be traced. Individuals may place their child for adoption because they are unable to provide adequate care, because they have failed to receive the resources they need to parent, or because they are pressured by their own parents or others.Categories of Adoptees
One UK study that questioned social workers about 168 recent young adoptees found that the reason for their adoption fell into three groups: relinquished infants (15%), those whose parents had requested adoption in complex circumstances (24%), and those children required by social services and the courts to be adopted (62%).Children may be permanently removed from a family
due to abuse or unfitness.
In some cases, parents' rights have been
terminated when their ethnic or cultural group has been deemed
unfit by the controlling government. Historically, the Stolen
Generation of Aboriginal
people in Australia were
affected by such policies, as were
Native Americans in the United States and First
Nations of Canada. Moreover, unwed mothers in many countries
still are (and in many more countries used to be) pressured or
forced by families, religious bodies or governments to relinquish
their children for adoption, due to the social stigma attached to
illegitimacy. These
practices of the past have become emotionally-charged social and
political issues in recent years, and many cases the policies have
changed. The United States, for example, now has the 1978 Indian
Child Welfare Act, which allows the tribe and family of a
Native American child to be involved in adoption decisions, with
preference being given to adoption within the child's tribe.
Adoptive parents
The reasons why people want to adopt children vary, as well. The inability to biologically reproduce is a common reason, often due to infertility. In many Western countries, step-parent adoption is the most common form of adoption as people choose to cement a new family following divorce or death of one parent. Often people adopt out of compassion, sometimes motivated by religious or philosophical conviction. Others may choose to adopt instead of creating a new life, to avoid contributing to perceived overpopulation, or out of the belief that it is more responsible to care for otherwise parent-less children than to reproduce. Others may do so to avoid passing on inheritable diseases (e.g., Tay-Sachs disease), or out of health concerns relating to pregnancy and childbirth. Some people feel that given the challenges of carrying a baby to term, adoption is the best way to grow a family.After adopting, some parents face judgment over
the validity of their parenting and may feel pressure to "prove"
themselves causing them to increase their parental involvement. A
study, evaluating the importance of biological ties for parental
investment indicates strengths in adoptive families. The data was
part of a detailed survey called the Early Childhood Longitudinal
Study, sponsored by the U.S. Department of Education and other
agencies. The study was funded by the National Science Foundation,
the Spencer Foundation and the American Educational Research
Association. It suggests that parents who have adopted may invest
more time in their children than others and concludes, "...adoptive
parents enrich their children's lives to compensate for the lack of
biological ties and the extra challenges of adoption."
Adoption may also pose questions for adoptive
parents. There are various schools of thought about openness,
maintaining connections to the child's family from birth, answering
a child's questions and helping a child deal with birth parents who
may not maintain regular contact.
Applying to adopt
Certain jurisdictions prohibit homosexual couples from adopting children, or have a policy of considering applications made by heterosexual couples before those of homosexual couples.The issue of adoption by nonheterosexual couples
is tied in with the debate on homosexuality. Preference
to heterosexual couples may be given in the belief that
heterosexuals who adopt often have fertility problems and therefore
must be given preference on medical grounds. Opponents say this
system is untenable in a free society and can leave needy children
with limited access to a family structure.
Adoption by same-sex civil unions or marriages
are allowed in Australia
(regions: Western Australia, Tasmania, ACT), the United
Kingdom, Canada, the
Netherlands, Belgium, Iceland, Sweden, Spain and in some of
the USA (see
Adoption by same-sex couples). As adoptions are mostly handled
by local courts in the United States, some judges and clerks accept
or deny petitions to adopt on criteria that vary from other judges
and clerks in the same state.
Only stepchild adoptions within same-sex couples,
i.e. where one of the partners in the relationship has children of
his or her own, are allowed in Denmark, Norway, France and Germany.
Ireland
(which does not recognize same-sex unions) does not allow joint
applications to adopt from same-sex couples, but does permit
applications from one of the partners. According to the adoption
laws in India, same-sex couples are not allowed to adopt.
In January 2008, the
European Court of Human Rights ruled that homosexual persons
have the right to adopt a child.
Cost of adoption
For the adoptive parents, adoption costs and assistance vary between countries. In many countries, it is illegal to charge for an adoption, while in others, adoptions must be facilitated on a non-profit basis. On the other hand many adoption programs will give financial assistance to adoptive parents, especially with their expenses. Some jurisdictions offer tax credits to offset the cost of adoption. In the United States there is a $10,390 tax credit for adoption. Adoptions through the child welfare system typically do not cost the adopting family anything beyond minor legal or other types of documented fees. In some states, families adopting from foster care may also receive yearly reimbursements for educational or therapeutic expenses up to a preset limit as well as have the adopted children retain Medicaid coverage even if they are covered by other insurance. The same is true in Canada. Regulations specify to whom payments may or may not be made, e.g., in some jurisdictions, no money may be paid to a woman above her medical expenses. There may also be significant expenses, such as legal fees and fees associated with searching for possible adoptees.International adoptions tend to be more expensive
and often incur additional costs, as the adoptive parents may be
required to travel to the source country. Translation fees may also
apply to legal documents.
Adoption numbers
The number of children available for adoption inside Western nations has dropped considerably in recent years, in part because of lower fertility rates, legalization of abortions, and the increased acceptance of single parenthood. In the USA, the number of children awaiting adoption has held steady in recent years, hovering between 133,000 to 129,000 during the period 2002 to 2006Adoptions, Live Births, and Adoption/Live Birth
Ratios are provided in the table below (alphabetical, by country)
for a number of Western countries.
Issues surrounding adoption
Family heritage and identity
Preserving the adopted child's biological heritage has become an issue in adoption. Recent work on openness in adoption has attempted to address this issue. These efforts are relatively recent, and full openness, while on the upswing, is still not the norm in adoption. International adoptees face additional challenges. Some adoptive families in international adoptions commit to integrating the child's birth nation cultures, traditions, stories, languages and relationships. Some countries require that adoptive parents keep the birth names of their adoptive children.For adopted people in adoptions where information
about the family of origin is withheld, secrecy may disrupt the
process of forming an identity.
Family concerns regarding genealogy can be a source of
confusion. Another common concern is the lack of a medical history,
which can affect the adopted person and also his/her subsequent
children. In most U.S. domestic adoptions, medical information is
not withheld from the child. However, if the adoption is closed,
such information becomes out of date unless a trace is undertaken
in adulthood.
Reunion
Some people influenced by adoption have a desire to reunite. In countries which practice confidential adoption, this has led to efforts to open sealed records and the formation of the Adoption reunion registry.Estimates for the extent of search behavior by
adoptees have proven elusive as studies show significant variation.
Even looking at the number of adoptees in search organizations is
unhelpful since it is impossible to determine the number of
independent searchers. In part, the problem stems from the fact
that the studies to date have been non-random surveys; the small
adoptee population makes random surveying difficult if not
impossible. Nevertheless, some indication of the level of search
interest by adoptees can be gleaned from the case of England and
Wales which opened adoptee birth records in 1975. As of 2001, the
office of National Statistics projected the percentage of adoptees
who would eventually request a copy of their original birth record
entry should exceed 25% for male adoptees, 40% for female adoptees,
and 33% for all adoptees. These proportions are considered
underestimates of actual search activity. Thus far, however, they
have exceeded projections made in 1975 when it was believed that
only a small fraction of adoptees would request their
records.
The research literature states adoptees give four
reasons for desiring reunion: 1) they wish for a more complete
genealogy, 2) they are curious about events leading to their
conception, birth, and relinquishment, 3) they hope to pass on
information to their children, and 4) they have a need for a
detailed biological background, including medical information.
Nevertheless, it is speculated by adoption researchers that the
reasons given are incomplete since although information could be
communicated by a third-party, interviews with adoptees, who sought
reunion, found they expressed a need to actually meet biological
relations. Along these lines, it appears that the desire for
reunion is linked to the adoptee’s interaction with and acceptance
within the community. Internally-focused theories suggest some
adoptees possess ambiguities in their sense of self, impairing
their ability to present a consistent identity. Reunion helps
resolve the lack of self-knowledge that creates this issue.
Externally-focused theories, in contrast, suggest that reunion is a
way for adoptees to overcome social stigma. First proposed by
Goffman, the theory has three parts: 1) adoptees perceive the
absence of biological ties as distinguishing their adoptive family
from others, 2) this understanding is strengthened by experiences
where non-adoptees suggest adoptive ties are weaker than blood
ties, 3) together, these factors engender, in some adoptees, a
sense of social exclusion, and 4) these adoptees react by searching
for a blood tie that reinforces their membership in the community.
It is important to note, that, at least, the externally-focused
rationale for reunion suggests adoptees may be well adjusted and
happy within their adoptive families, but will search as an attempt
to resolve experiences of social stigma.
Some adoptees reject the idea of reunion. It is
unclear, though, what differentiates adoptees who search from those
who do not. One paper summarizes the research, stating, “…attempts
to draw distinctions between the searcher and non-searcher are no
more conclusive or generalizable than attempts to
substantiate…differences between adoptees and nonadoptees.
Similarly, some, although not all, adoptive
parents may fear the possibility of reunion. This could manifest
itself by refusing to tell an adoptee that he or she is adopted,
hindering a search, and not acknowledging a reunion. In contrast,
other adoptive parents may feel a duty to help a search and
welcoming of new relationships.
Parents who put their child up for adoption may
also fear rejection and relive the events leading up to the
adoption. They may fear that the adoptee will be angry or will not
forgive them. Others face cultural taboos, e.g. in Korea a woman
may face the stigma of having a "foreign" child.
In sum, reunions can bring a variety of issues
for adoptees and parents. Nevertheless, most reunion results appear
to be positive. In the largest study to date (based on the
responses of 1,007 adoptees and relinquishing parents), 90%
responded that reunion was a beneficial experience. This does not,
however, imply ongoing relationships were formed between adoptee
and parent nor that this was the goal.
Adoption reform
Adoption practices have significantly changed
over the course of the last century, with each new movement
labeled, in some way, reform. Efforts to improve adoption in
contemporary times are associated with opening records and ensuring
family preservation. The movement began in 1970’s and found further
intellectual support in the 1990’s.
As concerns over illegitimacy began to subside,
social-welfare agencies began to emphasize that, if possible,
mothers and children should be kept together. In America, this was
clearly illustrated by the shift in policy of the New York
Foundling Home, an adoption-institution that is among the country’s
oldest and one that had pioneered sealed records. In the early part
of the 1970’s, three new principles were established for the
Foundling including, the statement, “ to prevent placements of
children (in institutions or foster care),” which reflected the
belief that children would be better off staying in their own
families and communities. This was a striking shift in policy and
remains in force today.
As the cultural shift evolved, movements to open
records proliferated. In the United States, Florence Fisher created
the Adoptees’ Liberty Movement Association (ALMA) in 1971, calling
sealed records “an affront to human dignity.” Her effort was among
the first to call for unsealing records. In 1975, Emma May Vilardi
created the first mutual-consent registry, the International
Soundex Reunion Registry (ISRR), allowing those separated by
adoption to locate one another via mutual registration. Similar
ideas took hold globally. In 1975, England and Wales opened records
on moral grounds, in England and Wales.
Later years saw the evolution of more militant
organizations such as Bastard
Nation (founded in 1996) which helped overturn sealed records
in Alabama, Delaware, New Hampshire, Oregon and Tennessee. .
Simultaneously, groups such as Origins USA (founded in 1997)
started to actively speak about family preservation and the rights
of natural mothers. The intellectual tone of these recent reform
movements was influenced by the publishing of "The Primal Wound" by
Nancy
Verrier. The "primal wound" is described as the "devastation
which the infant feels because of separation from its birth mother.
It is the deep and consequential feeling of abandonment which the
baby adoptee feels after the adoption and which may continue for
the rest of his life." However, this theory has been criticized by
other supporters of adoption reform for being extremely sexist,
somewhat naïve, as well as cruel towards those women who would make
an adoption plan for her child.Nevertheless, the argument has
shaped much of the more recent debate on adoption reform.
Adoption in schools
Adoption rights organizations often focus on the adoptees rights in school and advocate for change in the system to accommodate the adoptee in the classroom. Familiar lessons like "draw your family tree" or "trace your eye color back through your parents and grandparents to see where your genes come from" are viewed as hurtful to children who were adopted and do not know this biological information. New lesson plans can be substituted easily, that focus on "family orchards" or steer away from personal medical histories. Discussions about these sensitive topics, advocates argue, are the same as those that were conducted around issues of disability, race, and gender, and foster respect for differences in the same way as these earlier national conversations.Adoption in the media
Adoption experts complain that too much of the media coverage of adoption goes to one extreme or the other. There is favoritism in portraying the reunion rather than looking at the adoptee's life.In movies and TV the representation of adoption
is often viewed as unfair by adoption advocates. Adoption blogs,
for example, criticized Meet the
Robinsons for using outdated orphanage imagery as did advocacy
non-profit The Evan B. Donaldson Adoption Institute.:
"On the reverse many countries that are the
source of adoptions internationally put emphasis on the biological
parents where the adoptee is spending their entire life (or the
length of the movie / TV show) searching for their biological
parents. In both cases the feelings and thoughts of the adoptee are
downgraded and one participant group is favored, ignoring the two
other participants in the adoption process."
This also is in news reports covering adoption as
either stories of failed adoptions, troubled children, adoption
scandals, and even "baby buying" or saccharine stories of “perfect”
children and families. Only a very few news programs have treated
the subject in a serious way and in its full breadth.
Ignorance about adoption leads to representation
of children in foster care
as being so troubled that it would be impossible to adopt them and
create “normal” families. The result is that many children who
would thrive in a loving family instead wait years in foster care,
and even “age out” of the system at 18 without a family. A 2004
report from the Pew Commission on Children in Foster Care has shown
that the number of children waiting in foster care doubled since
the 1980s and now remains steady at about a half-million a
year."
Adoptism
Adoptism is a prejudice against adoption.This can be the belief that adoption is not a way
to build a family (which is different from the preference for any
other way or the personal free choice of not to do so spending time
and resources without a self-preservation purpose). This may not be
in blatant forms, but by assuming that the individual's abilities
come from their family's abilities and all abilities, like other
physical and psychological traits (and also because of those), are
"inherited" rather than learned, which actually has scientifical
basis to be the rule though learning has equally proven influence
over some hereditary abilities.
This can also be the belief that birthing
children is preferable to adopting (which is different from
preferring to birth and raise children for the sake of
self-preservation and sense of belonging). This can extend to the
idea that one should not adopt anyone that does not "look" like the
parents and can hide forms of racism and sometimes sexism.
Also it can be that making an adoption plan is
never a preferable for people who are unable to or choose not to
raise their children.
This also extends to the idea that it's alright
to tell the adoptee should only love either their biological family
or their adoptive family and they cannot love both, inclusively
denying or limiting any contact with or denigrating his heritage or
the one of his adoption. Usually this form is a hidden form of
prejudice on the environment or biology makes the child.
Sometimes adoptism is not conscious. For example,
with international adoption, there is often the idea that it's not
right to adopt internationally when there are kids domestically
that need to be adopted. This idea isn't blatantly adoptism but
rather a matter of priority for children of one's own country are
closer or simply for a nativist sense of belonging.
This can also be subtle as telling an adoptee that they don't have
an accent. With domestic adoptions it's often extended through
language choice that the adoptee, adoptive parents or the
biological parents can find offensive, such as "real" parents or
when an adoptee plans on finding their biological parents or the
idea that they can now ask many personal questions that the adoptee
may not be equipped or ready to respond to. These can sometimes be
prejudices against actual adopted people.
Sometimes this only is limited to certain kinds
of adoption. Adoption is often used to cover other social issues in
the society. For example, with adoption to gay and lesbian couples,
many who are against it are also against gays and lesbians - the
idea that a child needs a father and mother to function properly is
an issue. This also can extend to race where the idea that whites
should not adopt children of color because it's "unnatural".
Adoption in the wake of disasters
After disasters such as hurricanes, tsunamis, and wars there is often an outpouring of offers from adults who want to give homes to the children left in need. While adoption is often the best way to provide stable, loving families for children in need, it is also suggested that adoption in the immediate aftermath of trauma or upheaval may not be the best option. Moving children too quickly into new adoptive homes among strangers may be a mistake because with time, it may turn out that the parents have survived but were unable to find the children, or there may be a relative or neighbor who can offer shelter and homes. Providing safety and emotional support may be better in those situations than immediate relocation to a new adoptive family. There is also an increased risk, immediately following a disaster, that displaced and/or orphaned children may be more vulnerable to exploitation and child trafficking.Disruption
Disruption is the term most commonly used for ending an adoption. While technically an adoption is disrupted only when it is abandoned by the adopting parent or parents before it is legally completed (an adoption that is reversed after that point is instead referred to in the law as having been dissolved), in practice the term is used for all adoptions that are ended (more recently, among families disrupting, the euphemism "re-homing" has become current). It is usually initiated by the parents via a court petition, much like a divorce, to which it is analogous.While rarely discussed in public, even within the
adoption community, the practice has become far more widespread in
recent years, especially among those parents who have adopted from
Eastern
European countries, particularly Russia and Romania, where some
children have suffered far more from their institutionalization
than their parents were led to believe.
The language of adoption
The language used in adoption is changing and evolving, and it has become a controversial issue. The controversy arises over the use of terms which, while designed to be more appealing or less offensive to some persons affected by adoption, may simultaneously cause offense or insult to others. This controversy illustrates the problematic nature of adoption, as well as the fact that coining new words and phrases to describe ancient social practices does not alter the feelings and experiences of those affected by them.The two contrasting sets of terms are commonly
referred to as "Positive (or Respectful) Adoption Language" and
"Honest Adoption Language."
Positive Adoptive Language (PAL)
It is believed that social workers in the field
of adoption, most notably Marietta Spencer, created and began the
promotion of what they termed "Positive Adoption Language" around
the mid 1970s.. The terms contained in ""Positive Adoption
Language" include the terms "birth mother" (to replace the terms
"natural mother" and "first mother"), "placing" (to replace the
terms "relinquishment" or "surrender"), and restricting the terms
"mother" and "father" to refer solely to the parents who had
adopted. It reflects the point of view that (1) all relationships
and connections between the adopted child and his/her previous
family have been permanently and completely severed once the legal
adoption has taken place, and that (2) "placing" a child for
adoption is invariably a non-coerced "decision" the mother makes,
free of coercion or pressure from external circumstances or
agents.
The reasons for its use: In many cultures,
adoptive families face adoptism. Adoptism is made evident in
English speaking cultures by the prominent use of negative or
inaccurate language describing adoption. To combat adoptism, many
adoptive families encourage positive adoption language. The reasons
against its use: Many natural parents see "positive adoption
language" as terminology which glosses over painful facts they face
as they go into the indefinite post-adoption period of their lives.
They feel PAL has become a way to present adoption in the
friendliest light possible, in order to obtain even more infants
for adoption; ie, a marketing tool. These people refer to PAL as
"Adoption Friendly Language" or AFL.
Honest Adoption Language (HAL)
"Honest Adoption Language", on the other hand,
refers to a set of terms that reflect the point of view that: (1)
family relationships (social, emotional, psychological or physical)
that existed prior to the legal adoption often continue past this
point or endure in some form despite long periods of separation,
and that (2) mothers who have "voluntarily surrendered" children to
adoption (as opposed to involuntary terminations through
court-authorized child-welfare proceedings) seldom view it as a
choice that was freely made, but instead describe scenarios of
powerlessness, lack of resources, and overall lack of choice. It
also reflects the point of view that the term "birth mother" is
derogatory in implying that the woman has ceased being a mother
after the physical act of giving birth. Proponents of HAL liken
this to the mother being treated as a "breeder" or incubator"..
Terms included in HAL include the original terms that were used
before PAL, including "natural mother," "first mother," and
"surrendered for adoption."
The reasons for its use: In most cultures, the
adoption of a child does not change the identities of its mother
and father: they continue to be referred to as such. Those who
adopted a child were thereafter termed its "guardians," "foster,"
or "adoptive" parents. Most people use "Honest Adoption Language"
(HAL) because it is the original and most widely-used terminology.
Many of those directly affected by adoption loss believe these
terms more accurately reflect important but hidden and/or ignored
realities of adoption. It also has the advantage of not excluding
further contacts, sometimes even allowed since the beginning and
never totally severed. The reasons against its use: The term
"Honest" implies that all other language used in adoption is
dishonest.
Terms used in Positive Adoption Language:
Terms used in Honest Adoption Language:
Cultural variations in adoption
Attitudes and laws regarding adoption vary greatly. Whereas all cultures make arrangements whereby children whose own parents are unavailable to rear them to be brought up by others, not all cultures have the concept of adoption, that is treating children who are adopted as though they were the biological children of the adoptive parents. In true adoption, the children inherit the ascribed status of the adoptive parents (i.e., like biological children, they inheit aristocratic rank or tribal membership) and the same legal rights as biological children (i.e., if the parent dies intestate, they inherit on the same basis as biological offspring.)See also
- :Category:Adoptees
- Adopted child syndrome
- Adoption in ancient Rome
- Adoption in Islam
- Adoption in the United States
- Adoption by same-sex couples
- Affiliation
- Attachment disorder
- Attachment theory
- Bastard Nation
- Baby scoop era
- Child welfare
- Disruption
- Family
- Foster care
- Illegitimacy
- International adoption
- Parental leave
- Reactive attachment disorder
- Michael and Sharen Gravelle
References
External links
adoptive in Arabic: تبني
adoptive in Bulgarian: Осиновяване
adoptive in Czech: Adopce
adoptive in Danish: Adoption
adoptive in German: Adoption
adoptive in Spanish: Adopción
adoptive in Esperanto: Adopto
adoptive in Persian: فرزندخواندگی
adoptive in French: Adoption
adoptive in Scottish Gaelic: Uchd-mhacachd
adoptive in Galician: Adopción
adoptive in Icelandic: Fósturbarn
adoptive in Italian: Adozione
adoptive in Hebrew: אימוץ
adoptive in Lithuanian: Įvaikinimas
adoptive in Hungarian: Örökbefogadás
adoptive in Dutch: Adoptie
adoptive in Japanese: 養子縁組
adoptive in Norwegian: Adopsjon
adoptive in Polish: Adopcja
adoptive in Portuguese: Adoção
adoptive in Russian: Усыновление
adoptive in Simple English: Adoption
adoptive in Slovak: Adopcia
adoptive in Slovenian: Adopcija
adoptive in Serbian: Усвојење
adoptive in Finnish: Adoptio
adoptive in Swedish: Adoption
adoptive in Ukrainian: Адопція
adoptive in Walloon: Adoptaedje d' efants
adoptive in Chinese: 收養