Making families through adoption /
This volume examines adoption as a way of understanding the practices and ideology of kinship and family more generally. It focuses primarily on adoption practices in the US but will also use examples of adoption and fostering across cultures to put those American adoption practices into a comparati...
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Autor principal: | |
Otros Autores: | |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Thousand Oaks, Calif. :
SAGE/Pine Forge,
[2012]
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Colección: | Contemporary family perspectives.
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Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Introduction: Making families: inequalities and intimacies of adoption
- Adoption in the United States
- Adoption and statistics.
- 1. Adoption across cultures
- Ethnographic cases
- Preference for fostering in West Africa
- Commonality of child circulation in the Andes
- Stigma of adoption in the Middle East
- Exploring the significance of cases
- Debunking the opposition between natural and adoptive parents
- Who is responsible for raising children?
- History comes up behind us: fostering and adoption as shaped by context.
- 2. Adoption in the United States : historical perspectives
- Children's role in society
- What makes a family? Contradictions and controversies in American adoption
- Growing demand for adoptable babies and the increased regulation of adoptions: Who are the best mothers?
- Adoption secrecy in the formation of as-if families
- Making families through adoption in the postwar period
- Adoption in the United States today.
- 3. Adoption : private decisions, public influences
- Who adopts? Who is adopted?
- socioeconomic class: the power of money
- The children: characteristics of adopted children
- The parents: marital status and sexual orientation
- What makes a proper family? Interpreting social norms
- The role of the State
- Comparative perspectives on government's role in adoption
- Adoption in China
- Adoption in Norway.
- 4. Race, ethnicity, and racism in adoption and fosterage systems
- Race: a social construct, a forceful reality
- Race in U.S. adoption history
- Transracial adoption: issues and debates
- The Foster System and adoption in the United States
- Native Americans and adoption in the United States and Canada.
- 5. The practices of transnational adoption
- The global transfer of children
- Rules governing intercountry adoptions
- The receiving countries
- Early international adoption as humanitarian aid
- The United States
- Adoption in Norway
- The sending countries
- Korea
- Romania
- Guatemala
- China and its abandoned girls
- After adoption: the making of transnational families.