This comment will discuss how and why adoption law has evolved into a preference for open adoption, provide a brief history of post-adoption contact agreements, and discuss the current and best practices for utilizing post-adoption contact agreements. Finally, this comment will explore the use of mediation in various states to assist adoptive parents and birth parents in forming and maintaining an agreement they both accept and that furthers the best interests of the children being adopted. Using mediation to further the interests of children, adoptive couples, and birth parents is a positive trend in adoption law that should be encouraged and continued wherever post-adoption contact agreements are used
In New South Wales (NSW), legislation prioritises open adoption over long-term foster care when rest...
This Article challenges the view that adoption decision-makers should place children only in traditi...
The Article examines the role that legal representation of birth and prospective parents may or may ...
This comment will discuss how and why adoption law has evolved into a preference for open adoption, ...
This article will discuss the problems putative fathers face when their biological child is put up f...
Adoption practice has experienced a shift to ‘openness’ since the 1970s which recognises the importa...
The Children and Families Act 2014 pursues the twin policies of increasing the number of children ad...
Openness in adoption practice now often includes post-adoption contact with the adopted child's birt...
Adoption in the UK primarily concerns the placing of children from the public care system, often aga...
Adoption theory, policy and practice have undergone considerable change in the period between the in...
This comment will propose eliminating race and all factors that would be discriminatory in any other...
The adoption of children from care involves legally severing children’s birth family connections, of...
Openness in adoption practice now often includes post-adoption contact with the adopted child's birt...
In the UK, post-adoption contact between adoptive and birth families traditionally includes letterbo...
Discourse in adoptive families is how families create relationships and familial identity. This lite...
In New South Wales (NSW), legislation prioritises open adoption over long-term foster care when rest...
This Article challenges the view that adoption decision-makers should place children only in traditi...
The Article examines the role that legal representation of birth and prospective parents may or may ...
This comment will discuss how and why adoption law has evolved into a preference for open adoption, ...
This article will discuss the problems putative fathers face when their biological child is put up f...
Adoption practice has experienced a shift to ‘openness’ since the 1970s which recognises the importa...
The Children and Families Act 2014 pursues the twin policies of increasing the number of children ad...
Openness in adoption practice now often includes post-adoption contact with the adopted child's birt...
Adoption in the UK primarily concerns the placing of children from the public care system, often aga...
Adoption theory, policy and practice have undergone considerable change in the period between the in...
This comment will propose eliminating race and all factors that would be discriminatory in any other...
The adoption of children from care involves legally severing children’s birth family connections, of...
Openness in adoption practice now often includes post-adoption contact with the adopted child's birt...
In the UK, post-adoption contact between adoptive and birth families traditionally includes letterbo...
Discourse in adoptive families is how families create relationships and familial identity. This lite...
In New South Wales (NSW), legislation prioritises open adoption over long-term foster care when rest...
This Article challenges the view that adoption decision-makers should place children only in traditi...
The Article examines the role that legal representation of birth and prospective parents may or may ...