Adoption and the Care of Children
The British and American Experience
Patricia M. Morgan(Author)
Civitas:Institute for the Study of Civil Society (Publisher)
Published in May 2000
Book
Paperback/Softback
218 pages
978-1-903386-85-9 (ISBN)
Description
Adoption is out of favour. Numbers have fallen dramatically, and baby adoptions have become rare events. Recent trends in family law make it increasingly unlikely that children will ever be declared free to adopt, while would-be adopters are discouraged by a series of obstacles and objections. Consequently children who are unable to live with their natural parents are likely to spend long periods - possibly their entire childhoods - 'in care'. This can entail years of to-ing and fro-ing between children's homes, foster parents, and repeated attempts to re-unite them with neglectful and often abusive parents. The results for the children concerned are extremely poor, and all the evidence suggests that the state makes a very bad substitute parent. Children who have spent time 'in care' are more prone to psychiatric disorders, they suffer in terms of education and health, and they often 'graduate' from the system to homelessness, unemployment and prison. The results for adopted children, on the other hand, are extremely good. They do well by all measures.
When they experience problems, these often relate to their early childhood trauma at the hands of natural parents, or to long periods spent 'in care' prior to adoption. In this book Patricia Morgan argues that childcare legislation and practice should be re-organised so that adoption becomes the first, not the last, option for children who cannot live with their parents. A child welfare system for the twenty-first century should be built around finding a permanent home for every child. "Couples applying to adopt children are increasingly being turned down because social workers believe they are too middle-class or have not had sufficient experience of racial prejudice." The Times. "Patricia Morgan claims that prejudice against adoption is so great amongst childcare professionals that they will find a reason to disqualify many parents." The Independent. "There is much to agree with here...As a 'client' on the receiving end of various social services departments involved in adoption, I can testify to the accuracy of Morgan's criticisms of their slowness." Times Higher Education Supplement.
"The book is essentially an indictment of local authorities for their poor track record in looking after children. Written by a professional sociologist, the 155-page book comes across as a well-documented report...It presents a clear case for adoption reform, in language which the layman can understand." Adoption UK. "Ms Morgan...thinks less emphasis should be placed on birth families and more on speedy and secure placements with adoptive parents." The Economist. "Patricia Morgan suggests that adoption should be taken away from local authority social services and handed over to voluntary organisations." New Statesman.
When they experience problems, these often relate to their early childhood trauma at the hands of natural parents, or to long periods spent 'in care' prior to adoption. In this book Patricia Morgan argues that childcare legislation and practice should be re-organised so that adoption becomes the first, not the last, option for children who cannot live with their parents. A child welfare system for the twenty-first century should be built around finding a permanent home for every child. "Couples applying to adopt children are increasingly being turned down because social workers believe they are too middle-class or have not had sufficient experience of racial prejudice." The Times. "Patricia Morgan claims that prejudice against adoption is so great amongst childcare professionals that they will find a reason to disqualify many parents." The Independent. "There is much to agree with here...As a 'client' on the receiving end of various social services departments involved in adoption, I can testify to the accuracy of Morgan's criticisms of their slowness." Times Higher Education Supplement.
"The book is essentially an indictment of local authorities for their poor track record in looking after children. Written by a professional sociologist, the 155-page book comes across as a well-documented report...It presents a clear case for adoption reform, in language which the layman can understand." Adoption UK. "Ms Morgan...thinks less emphasis should be placed on birth families and more on speedy and secure placements with adoptive parents." The Economist. "Patricia Morgan suggests that adoption should be taken away from local authority social services and handed over to voluntary organisations." New Statesman.
More details
Series
Edition
New edition
Language
English
Place of publication
London
United Kingdom
Target group
College/higher education
Professional and scholarly
Edition type
New edition
Dimensions
Height: 210 mm
Width: 148 mm
ISBN-13
978-1-903386-85-9 (9781903386859)
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Schweitzer Classification