In this article, community assessments of support for three levels of open adoption are exam-ined, including two types of mediated adoption, fully disclosed adoption, and confidential adoption. Combining telephone survey data from a Canada-wide random sample of 706 respondents with 82 qualitative interviews, the authors report on community assessments of these levels of openness and the relevance of these results for other survey research con-ducted on these issues. The authors also explore community assessments of the perceived advantages and disadvantages of open adoption and confidential adoption for adoptive par-ents, birth parents, and adopted children and how these may or may not reflect clinical assess-ments. Finally, the authors con...
Parents and adolescents (mean age, 15.7 years) from 177 adoptive families participating in the seco...
Journal ArticleFor some decades there has been in Canada, as in the United States, recurrent public ...
This Open Access book presents unique evidence from the first comprehensive study of the outcomes of...
In open adoptions, birth and adoptive families exchange identifying information and have contact. Al...
As openness in adoption is still in its infancy, there has not been much systematic research on ...
Open adoption, in which adopted children may have contact with their birth family, is a relatively n...
Background: Open adoptions have not often been studied prospectively, especially since they have bec...
One significant change in adoption practice that has occurred over the last four decades is the shif...
Using 323 matched parties of birth mothers and adoptive parents, this study examines the association...
Total secrecy and confidentiality no longer typify adoption in the United States. Today, most adopti...
The author presents a research study on adoptive parents’ perceptions of their own open versus close...
While adoption has been in existence for centuries, only in recent years has open adoption, the proc...
Birth Family Contact Among Sexually Diverse Adoptive Families: Types of Contact and Perceptions of O...
The suggestion is growing that adoption agencies have been severing ties with adoptive families too ...
95% of adoption in the United States are open adoptions (Siegel & Smith, 2012). Past research has fo...
Parents and adolescents (mean age, 15.7 years) from 177 adoptive families participating in the seco...
Journal ArticleFor some decades there has been in Canada, as in the United States, recurrent public ...
This Open Access book presents unique evidence from the first comprehensive study of the outcomes of...
In open adoptions, birth and adoptive families exchange identifying information and have contact. Al...
As openness in adoption is still in its infancy, there has not been much systematic research on ...
Open adoption, in which adopted children may have contact with their birth family, is a relatively n...
Background: Open adoptions have not often been studied prospectively, especially since they have bec...
One significant change in adoption practice that has occurred over the last four decades is the shif...
Using 323 matched parties of birth mothers and adoptive parents, this study examines the association...
Total secrecy and confidentiality no longer typify adoption in the United States. Today, most adopti...
The author presents a research study on adoptive parents’ perceptions of their own open versus close...
While adoption has been in existence for centuries, only in recent years has open adoption, the proc...
Birth Family Contact Among Sexually Diverse Adoptive Families: Types of Contact and Perceptions of O...
The suggestion is growing that adoption agencies have been severing ties with adoptive families too ...
95% of adoption in the United States are open adoptions (Siegel & Smith, 2012). Past research has fo...
Parents and adolescents (mean age, 15.7 years) from 177 adoptive families participating in the seco...
Journal ArticleFor some decades there has been in Canada, as in the United States, recurrent public ...
This Open Access book presents unique evidence from the first comprehensive study of the outcomes of...