
Adoption Beyond Borders
How International Adoption Benefits Children
Rebecca Compton(Author)
Oxford University Press Inc
Published on 19. July 2018
Book
Paperback/Softback
250 pages
978-0-19-091481-3 (ISBN)
Description
Now Available in Paperback, Adoption Beyond Borders endorses international adoption as a viable path to child welfare by exploring key topics including:
? Effects of institutionalization on children's developing brains, cognitive abilities, and socioemotional functioning
? Challenges of navigating issues of identity when adopting across national, cultural, and racial lines
? Strong emotional bonds that form even without genetic relatedness
? How adoptive families can address the special needs of children who experienced early neglect and deprivation, thereby providing a supportive environment in which to flourish
? Features the author's first-hand accounts of her own adoption journey as she visited a Kazakhstani orphanage daily for nearly a year, and illustrates the complexities and implications of the research evidence
? Effects of institutionalization on children's developing brains, cognitive abilities, and socioemotional functioning
? Challenges of navigating issues of identity when adopting across national, cultural, and racial lines
? Strong emotional bonds that form even without genetic relatedness
? How adoptive families can address the special needs of children who experienced early neglect and deprivation, thereby providing a supportive environment in which to flourish
? Features the author's first-hand accounts of her own adoption journey as she visited a Kazakhstani orphanage daily for nearly a year, and illustrates the complexities and implications of the research evidence
Reviews / Votes
This is one of the very best, most important books written on the plight of unparented children worldwide and the role international adoption can and should play for such children...This book is balanced, entirely fair in airing all important positions. But it is hard-hitting, insisting on what the evidence tells us about the important facts and how those facts should drive policy. * Adoption Quarterly * Inspired by her own challenging experience as a parent adopting a child from Kazakhstan, academic psychologist Rebecca Compton has authored a clear, well-documented argument that a child's long term health, development and socioemotional well being are largely determined by the presence of devoted, contingent caregivers and a stable family during early life. Addressing criticisms with evidence rather than supposition, she reaches the indisputable conclusion that international adoption remains the best hope for many unparented children worldwide. * Dana E. Johnson, MD, PhD, Professor of Pediatrics, University of Minnesota * This is a deeply intelligent book that should be a must read for adoptive parents, policy makers, academics, child welfare professionals, and all who care about children. It is beautifully written, insightful and wonderfully wise. Compton destroys many of the stereotypes that dominate discourse on international adoption, and provides an understanding of the reality based on an in-depth assessment of the social science. * Elizabeth Bartholet, JD, Morris Wasserstein Professor of Law and Faculty Director of the Child Advocacy Program, Harvard Law School *More details
Language
English
Place of publication
New York
United States
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Dimensions
Height: 234 mm
Width: 156 mm
Thickness: 15 mm
Weight
428 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-19-091481-3 (9780190914813)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

Book
03/2016
Oxford University Press Inc
€38.50
Shipment within 15-20 days
Person
Rebecca J. Compton is professor of psychology at Haverford College, where she has taught since 1999. She received her BA from Vassar College and her PhD in biological psychology from University of Chicago. Her previous research focused on executive function, attention, and emotion regulation in the human brain, and she has co-authored Cognitive Neuroscience, 4th Edition (2018).
Content
- PART 1: The Adopted Child: Patterns of Loss and Gain
- Ch. 1: Introduction
- Ch. 2: Physical and Cognitive Development
- Ch. 3: Social and Emotional Development
- Ch. 4: Culture, Race, and Identity
- PART 2: Adoptive Families: Biological, Social, and Clinical Approaches
- Ch. 5: Adoption and the Biology of Parenting
- Ch. 6: Adoptive Families in Society
- Ch. 7: Special Needs and Interventions
- Ch. 8: Conclusions and Policy Considerations