A history of adoption in England and Wales 1850-1961 /
Adoption is one of the most emotive and complex subjects in social and family history. Gill Rossini's social history of adoption between 1850 and 1961 uncovers the perspectives of all those concerned in adoption: children, birth relatives, adoptive families, and all the agencies and organisatio...
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
---|---|
Autor principal: | |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Barnsley [UK] :
Pen and Sword Family History,
2014.
|
Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Acknowledgements; A Note Regarding Confidentiality; A Note Regarding Terminology; A List of Illustrations; 1. Introduction and Background; What Exactly is Adoption?; Why Adopt?; A Word about Illegitimacy; How Easy is Adoption to Research?; What Was Happening Before 1850?; 2. "Our Innocence is all a Sham": Fallen Women, DisplacedChildren and Public Sensibilities, 1850-1918; Children in England and Wales in the 1850s; The 'Displaced Children' of Victorian England and Wales; The 'Fallen Woman'; 'A Fate Worse than Death': Solutions to the Unwanted Pregnancy; Baby Farming; Public Outcry
- Adoption and Popular CultureInstitutions; Charitable and Campaigning Organisations; 'Boarding Out' and Other Solutions; The First World War; 3. The Push for Legal Adoption, 1918-1926; The Aftermath of World War One; Back to the Home; Adoption Societies; The 1926 Adoption of Children Act; 'Not in Front of the Children': Adoption and Secrecy; 4. From Perfect Families to Disrupted Lives: 1926-1945; How Legal Adoption Fared; The Horsbrugh Report; On the Eve of War; World War Two; Mass Observation; Evacuation; Helping the Unmarried Mother; 5. For the Welfare of All Concerned? 1945-1961
- The Brave New World of the Welfare StateThe Adoption 'Boom'; Mother and Baby Homes Post 1945; Guiding the New Parents; Eleanor's Story; Changes on the Horizon: The 1960s and Beyond; Postscript: Adoption as Quiet Revolution; 6. Researching Adoption; Taking a Wider View; First of All: Family Sources; Planning Your Research; Resources for Researching Adoption Pre 1926; Resources for Researching Adoption Post 1926; Other Sources; Appendix; Adoption Procedure: Taken from the booklet, A Baby is Adopted, by Margaret Kornitzer and published by The Children'sSociety, 1950; Further Reading; Glossary