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The Routledge Handbook of Adoption
Details
This handbook provides a central source of contemporary scholarship from a variety of disciplines with an international perspective and uses a multifaceted and interdisciplinary approach to ground adoption practices and activities in scientific research.
Adoption is practiced globally yielding a multidimensional area of study that cannot be characterized by a single movement or discipline. This handbook provides a central source of contemporary scholarship from a variety of disciplines with an international perspective and uses a multifaceted and interdisciplinary approach to ground adoption practices and activities in scientific research. Perspectives of birth/first parents, adoptive parents, and adopted persons are brought forth through a range of disciplinary and theoretical lenses.
Beginning with background and context of adoption, including sociocultural and political contexts, the handbook then addresses the diversity of adoptive families in terms of family forms, attitudes about adoption, and characteristics of adopted children. Next, research examining the lived experience of adoption for birth parents, adoptive parents, and adopted individuals is presented. A variety of outcomes for internationally and domestically adopted children and adoptive families is then discussed and the handbook concludes by addressing the development, training, and implementation of adoption competent clinical practice.
With cutting-edge research from top international scholars in a diversity of fields, The Routledge Handbook of Adoption should be considered essential reading for students, researchers, and practitioners across the fields of social work, sociology, psychology, medicine, family science, education, and demography.
Interviews with chapter authors can be accessed as podcasts (https://anchor.fm/emily-helder) or as videos (https://bit.ly/2FIoi0a).
Autorentext
Gretchen Miller Wrobel, Ph.D., is the University Professor of Psychology at Bethel University, USA and co-investigator on the Minnesota-Texas Adoption Research Project. Dr. Wrobel's research interests include information seeking related to curiosity about one's adoption and adoptive family communication. She is past editor of Adoption Quarterly.
Emily Helder, Ph.D., is an Associate Professor of Psychology at Calvin University, USA. Dr. Helder is a clinical neuropsychologist whose research and training have focused on the impact of early experience on later development, language, and the experience of abuse, neglect, and early deprivation.
Elisha Marr, Ph.D., is an Associate Professor of Sociology and Director of Gender Studies at Calvin University, USA. Dr. Marr's research on transracial adoption includes identifying trends in adoption rates, experiences of transracial adoptees and their adoptive parents, and racial preferences of adoptive parents. More recently, Marr has expanded to exploring motivations to adopt.
Inhalt
Part I: Adoption in context
Historical and contemporary contexts of US adoption: an overview
US adoption by the numbers
An economic perspective on ethics in adoption policy
Domestic adoption in Ethiopia
Intersection of information science and crisis pregnancy decision-making
Respecting children's relationships and identities in adoption
The Early Growth and Development Study: using an adoption design to understand family influences and child development
Part II: Diversity in adoption
Unique challenges and strengths for families formed through international adoption
A critical adoption studies and Asian Americanist integrative perspective on the psychology of Korean adoption
A nationally representative comparison of Black and White adoptive parents of Black adoptees
Racial and gender preferences among potential adoptive parents
Adoptive families headed by LGBTQ parents.
Post-institutionalized adopted children: effects of prolonged institutionalization and adoption at an older age
Adoptees with disabilities or medically involved children: a multidisciplinary approach for preparing parents, assessing the child, and supporting successful family formation
Adoption in the context of natural disaster
Part III: Lived experience
Birth mothers' options counseling and relinquishment experiences
Transracial adoptees: the rewards and challenges of searching for their birth families
Communication about adoption in families
Open adoption
How adoptive parents think about their role as parents
Religiosity and adoption
Adoptive microaggressions: historical foundations, current research, and practical implications
Maltreatment of adoptees in adoptive homes **
Part IV: Outcomes
Speech and language development in adopted children
Behavioral and emotional adjustment in adoptees
The neurobiological embedding of early social deprivation in children exposed to institutional rearing
Post-adoption short- and long-term social adaptation and competence of internationally adopted children
Academic performance and school adjustment of internationally adopted children in Norway.
Parenting stress in adoptive families
Adoption instability, adoption breakdown
Part V: Adoption Competency
Adoption competent clinical practice
Training for Adoption Competency curriculum
Awareness of adoption at school
Post-adoption services: needs and adoption type.
Adoption-specific curricula in higher education
Weitere Informationen
- Allgemeine Informationen
- GTIN 09781138362505
- Editor Wrobel Gretchen Miller, Emily Helder, Elisha Marr
- Sprache Englisch
- Genre Political Science
- Größe H246mm x B174mm
- Jahr 2020
- EAN 9781138362505
- Format Fester Einband
- ISBN 978-1-138-36250-5
- Titel The Routledge Handbook of Adoption
- Autor Gretchen Miller (Bethel University, Usa) H Wrobel
- Gewicht 1440g
- Herausgeber Taylor & Francis
- Anzahl Seiten 520