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Lebanon: Closed adoption system helping traffickers

Closed adoption system helping traffickers

September 09, 2013 12:35 AM

By India Stoughton

The Daily Star

BEIRUT: Adoption is often seen as a benevolent act. Rather than being brought up in an orphanage, a parentless child is given a home, stability and a loving family. In Lebanon, however, the closed adoption system has helped to transform the practice into something less than benign: a business. When Daniel Ibn Zayd was adopted in 1963, the details of his biological family were fabricated. “In the paperwork we have from the orphanage it lists family name, mother, father, birth date, birthplace,” he explains. “You grow up thinking that this is true.

U.S. adoptive mother guilty of homicide in death of Ethiopian girl

U.S. adoptive mother guilty of homicide in death of Ethiopian girl

By Jonathan Kaminsky

OLYMPIA, Washington | Mon Sep 9, 2013 11:09pm EDT

(Reuters) - A U.S. adoptive mother accused of starving her 13-year-old Ethiopian-born daughter and locking her outside in the cold, where she died from exposure, was found guilty of homicide on Monday in Washington state.

Hana Williams, adopted from Ethiopia in 2008, died of hypothermia in May 2011 after she was found unconscious outside shortly after midnight in temperatures hovering around 40 degrees Fahrenheit (4 degrees Celsius), authorities said.

Las adopciones internacionales van en caída libre desde 2004

Las adopciones internacionales van en caída libre desde 2004

Los países de origen mejoran sus políticas de protección a la infancia

En 2012 llegaron a España 1.669 niños, frente a los 5.541 de hace ocho años

MARÍA SOSA TROYA Madrid 9 SEP 2013 - 22:34 CET11

Archivado en: Adopciones internacionales Ministerio de Sanidad Madres Hijos Menores Adopciones Parentesco Maternidad Familia Ministerios Administración Estado España Administración pública Sociedad

Der Kampf um die Waisenkinder

Der Kampf um die Waisenkinder

Trotz Überbevölkerung tobt zwischen den Industrieländern ein Konkurrenzkampf um Waisenkinder – Paare haben es zunehmend schwer, ein Kind zu finden. Immer stärker mischt sich die Politik ein, doch die Schweiz hat nicht viel mitzureden. Ein exklusiver Report über Interessen und Hintergründe in der Welt der Adoption.

Publiziert: 08.09.2013

Voraussetzungen für eine Adoption

Der Weg zum Wunschkind ist dornig: Informations-­Seminare, Interviews mit ­Sozialarbeitern, Inspektion der Wohnung, der Finanzen, des Privatlebens. Die Abklärungen der Aufsichtsbehörden können ein Jahr dauern. Erst danach kann man Kontakt zu einer ­Vermittlungsagentur aufnehmen. Weitere Abklärungen folgen, sie können ein weiteres Jahr kosten.

Agreement with US will 'open door' in adoption process

Agreement with US will 'open door' in adoption process

04 SEPTEMBER 2013

PARENTS hoping to adopt children received a welcome boost after the Irish and American governments agreed new arrangements for adoptions between the two countries.

The new arrangement opens up the prospect of Irish-based families adopting children from the US.

Adoptions into Ireland have dropped dramatically in the last four years, from 307 in 2009 to 117 in 2012. Only 19 children were adopted from the US last year.

Agreement would allow adoption from USA

Agreement would allow adoption from USA

Tuesday, September 03, 2013

An agreement to allow Irish couples to adopt from the USA is expected to be signed in Washington today.

The Irish Examiner understands that a delegation headed by children’s minister Frances Fitzgerald and Adoption Authority chairman Geoffrey Shannon travelled to Washington at the weekend for the signing of the deal. The wording of the final draft document for the agreement was agreed between the two countries in April. Under that wording, it was agreed that Irish couples will only have their adoptions recognised here if a number of provisions are satisfied:

A relevant authority in the US provides a letter showing why the child could not be timely placed with suitable prospective adoptive parents in the US, detailing what steps have been taken to support this finding;

2013 Arbeit und Prügel für deutsche Kinder - Preußische Allgemeine Zeitung

2013 work and beatings for German children - Prussian Allgemeine Zeitung

More and more German Youth Welfare Offices are sending behaviorally discrepant and criminal youths to "experiential institutions" abroad, where they should learn discipline and subordination. Thus, the authorities are easily rid of the problem cases and the carriers do good business. For many young people living in Romania, this means a martyrdom of abuse and exploitation.

Carsten (name changed) has been running a small farm for three years with his disabled host father and his mother. Since then, he shares the bedroom with the old woman, the host mother left the family two years ago. In Elisabethstadt (Dumbraveni) Carsten visited a school for learning disabled people on two days of teaching. There is no well in the yard, so in the morning and in the evening about ten buckets of water have to be brought from the village well. An everyday Romanian fate - only with the difference that Carsten was sent here by a German youth welfare office. He has not seen his homeland for three years.

German youth welfare offices increasingly resort to the offer of private providers to send young people with disabilities to a "last chance" in host families or care facilities in Romania. The carriers receive between 4,000 and 6,000 euros per child per month, with the host families receiving only around 400 euros. The education methods are similar to those in US boot camps: opposition is hardly tolerated, ignoring the house rules at all. The education based on punitive measures relies on hard work, forced marches and physical restriction.

Under the motto "Living without consumption - simple but heartfelt", children and adolescents living in the simplest of surroundings should make completely new life experiences in suitable Romanian family relationships, which should enable a new beginning in Germany. With the help of punishment and reward, children and adolescents are forced to submit. As the former employee of the Martinswerk Dorlen, Christa Schudeja, indicates, it was even thought out loud in employee interviews about the reintroduction of corporal punishment. If the children damage something, they have to replace it with their pocket money.

Meet the New Anti-Adoption Movement The surprising next frontier in reproductive justice

For a long time, Claudia Corrigan D’Arcy thought of herself as an adoption success story. Pregnant at 18 from an affair with her boss, she denied the pregnancy until her coworkers began to notice. Too far along to get an abortion, she looked up an adoption agency in the Yellow Pages and found herself agreeing to move to Boston and live with a host family until she gave birth. Her son, who she calls Max (his adoptive parents gave him a different name), was born in November of 1987 and handed over to a couple Corrigan D’Arcy had only seen in photos. And that was that.

She told herself she’d done the smart thing. She’d given her son a two-parent family of means. It wasn’t until more than a decade later that Corrigan D’Arcy, by then married and the mother of three more children, began to rethink what had happened.

By having her move to a new state while pregnant, she felt the agency was purposely isolating her from friends and family who might have helped her. Though she knew who her baby’s father was, the agency told her not to tell him she was pregnant. She could have sued him for child support—he was a wealthy lawyer—but the adoption agency didn’t talk about that, only about the hardships she would face as a “welfare mom,” should she keep her child. They called her a “family-building angel” and a “saint” for considering adoption. “It was crazy subtle, subtle, subtle brainwashing,” she told me recently.

Adoption has long been perceived as the win-win way out of a a difficult situation. An unwed mother gets rid of the child she’s not equipped to care for; an adoptive family gets a much-wanted child. But people are increasingly realizing that the industry is not nearly as well-regulated and ethical as it should be. There are issues of coercion, corruption, and lack of transparency that are only now being fully addressed.

The past decade has seen the rise of a broad and loose coalition of activists out to change the way adoption works in America. This coalition makes bedfellows of people who would ordinarily have nothing to do with each other: Mormon and fundamentalist women who feel they were pressured by their churches, progressives who believe adoption is a classist institution that takes the children of the young and poor and gives them to the wealthier and better-educated, and adoptive parents who have had traumatic experiences with corrupt adoption agencies.

Misguided Saviors: An Analysis of International Adoption Issues and Necessary Considerations for Prospective Adoptive Parents

I worked in an adoption agency the summer of 2012 and have been very interested in the subject for a while. I decided to

combine this with my interest in international relations by analyzing how adoption takes place on a global scale. My sociology

background from studying at Colorado College also made me interested in the interactions between vulnerable less developed

countries and wealthy western countries when sending children abroad for adoption. Children’s rights is something that I feel strongly

about and this report has allowed me to research a children’s rights issue in depth, while taking advantage of Geneva’s international