Doing good, well. A look at International Adoption
Via Digg I ran into this article recently. It deals with problems that come up with international adoption. I am a big believer that not only are churches supposed to do good, but actually do well at it. We should be more than good intentioned, but actually effective. That applies to adoption as well.
Here is a teaser from the article from foreignpolicy.com.
Westerners have been sold the myth of a world orphan crisis. We are told that millions of children are waiting for their “forever families” to rescue them from lives of abandonment and abuse. But many of the infants and toddlers being adopted by Western parents today are not orphans at all. Yes, hundreds of thousands of children around the world do need loving homes. But more often than not, the neediest children are sick, disabled, traumatized, or older than 5. They are not the healthy babies that, quite understandably, most Westerners hope to adopt. There are simply not enough healthy, adoptable infants to meet Western demand—and there’s too much Western money in search of children. As a result, many international adoption agencies work not to find homes for needy children but to find children for Western homes.
Since the mid-1990s, the number of international adoptions each year has nearly doubled, from 22,200 in 1995 to just under 40,000 in 2006. At its peak, in 2004, more than 45,000 children from developing countries were adopted by foreigners. Americans bring home more of these children than any other nationality—more than half the global total in recent years.
Where do these babies come from? As international adoptions have flourished, so has evidence that babies in many countries are being systematically bought, coerced, and stolen away from their birth families. Nearly half the 40 countries listed by the U.S. State Department as the top sources for international adoption over the past 15 years—places such as Belarus, Brazil, Ethiopia, Honduras, Peru, and Romania—have at least temporarily halted adoptions or been prevented from sending children to the United States because of serious concerns about corruption and kidnapping. And yet when a country is closed due to corruption, many adoption agencies simply transfer their clients’ hopes to the next “hot” country. That country abruptly experiences a spike in infants and toddlers adopted overseas—until it too is forced to shut its doors.
Along the way, the international adoption industry has become a market often driven by its customers. Prospective adoptive parents in the United States will pay adoption agencies between $15,000 and $35,000 (excluding travel, visa costs, and other miscellaneous expenses) for the chance to bring home a little one. Special needs or older children can be adopted at a discount. Agencies claim the costs pay for the agency’s fee, the cost of foreign salaries and operations, staff travel, and orphanage donations. But experts say the fees are so disproportionately large for the child’s home country that they encourage corruption.
As always, greet this kind of news with a bit of skepticism, but I think you ought to investigate too. You can do so, here.
12-10-08 addition: I just want to clarify that I am VERY pro adoption – both domestically and internationally. Just because their are problems with the process I am in no way advocating leaving the process. I just want us to do the process better.
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December 10th, 2008 at 12:51 pm
Save your skepticism for adoption. B.J. Graff has written a very well researched article that echoes my 40 years of research in this area.
Adoption is for orphans and children whose parents cannot care for then, despite being offered assistance to do so. It has become instead a multi-bullion dollar marketplace of unscrupulous baby brokers who kidnap and steal children to met a demand. Not exactly noble, good or humanitarian.
Additional reading:
I highly recommend you read the following:
1. Child Trafficking by David Smolin works.bepress.com/david_smolin/
2. Romania for Export Only
romania-forexportonly.blogspot.com/
3. Read what those adopted internationally and or interracially feel as adults:
http://www.transracialabductees.org/index.html
and: http://tinyurl.com/5qdjqe
5. The Stork Market: America’s Multi-Billion Dollar Unregulated Adoption Industry
AdvocatePublications.com
Check with the UN. They state that adoption should always be a LAST RESORT!
Taking children one at a time from their origins does nothing to ameliorate the poverty of their family, their village or their nation. There are far more humanitarian ways to help without exploiting poor nations of their future generations and contributing to cultural genocide.
[Reply]
jeff Reply:
December 22nd, 2008 at 4:55 pm
If I understand your position, I am not sure I agree. I am for legal, ethical, and compassionate adoption. It is not any of those to take a stolen child as your own. But many children do need homes and I am all for that.
[Reply]