It is impossible to know the number of infants killed or illegally abandoned at birth. No official reporting requirements exist, but conservative estimates claim that in the United States, 150-300 infants are killed within twenty-four hours of life and that over 100 infants are illegally abandoned. Beginning in 1999, in an effort to stem the problem of neonaticide and illegal abandonment, states began enacting laws to legalize abandonment. By 2008, all fifty states had enacted safe haven laws, which allow parents to anonymously abandon newborns by delivering them to designated providers, such as hospitals. This article provides a practical and theoretical framework to discuss safe haven laws, which have come under attack by various adoption...
This article first offers a comparison between the stereotype dominated understanding of infanticide...
In seventeenth-century England, single women who killed their newborns were believed to have acted t...
An earlier version of this paper was presented by Professor Parness at the Third Annual Wells Confer...
It is impossible to know the number of infants killed or illegally abandoned at birth. No official r...
This Article analyzes the politics, implementation, and influence of Infant Safe Haven laws. These l...
Safe Haven laws allow parents or guardians to legally relinquish an infant without fear of prosecuti...
Article published in the Michigan State University School of Law Student Scholarship Collection
This study represents an attempt to describe the extent and features of safe haven legislation in th...
Who are the Mothers who kill their infants at birth? Why do they kill? How do they kill? Once the in...
Safe Haven laws allow genetic mothers to abandon their newborns with no questions asked. Newborns ar...
Background: Safe Haven Infant Protection (SHIP) laws are variously-titled state-level laws that perm...
Title from PDF of title page (University of Missouri--Columbia, viewed on Feb 24, 2010).The entire t...
In her recent Columbia Law Review article, "Infant Safe Haven Laws: Legislating in the Culture of Li...
The purpose of this policy analysis was to examine the Infant Safe Haven Law and its many implicatio...
Adoption in the United States is a complex patchwork of law and practice that involves payments of n...
This article first offers a comparison between the stereotype dominated understanding of infanticide...
In seventeenth-century England, single women who killed their newborns were believed to have acted t...
An earlier version of this paper was presented by Professor Parness at the Third Annual Wells Confer...
It is impossible to know the number of infants killed or illegally abandoned at birth. No official r...
This Article analyzes the politics, implementation, and influence of Infant Safe Haven laws. These l...
Safe Haven laws allow parents or guardians to legally relinquish an infant without fear of prosecuti...
Article published in the Michigan State University School of Law Student Scholarship Collection
This study represents an attempt to describe the extent and features of safe haven legislation in th...
Who are the Mothers who kill their infants at birth? Why do they kill? How do they kill? Once the in...
Safe Haven laws allow genetic mothers to abandon their newborns with no questions asked. Newborns ar...
Background: Safe Haven Infant Protection (SHIP) laws are variously-titled state-level laws that perm...
Title from PDF of title page (University of Missouri--Columbia, viewed on Feb 24, 2010).The entire t...
In her recent Columbia Law Review article, "Infant Safe Haven Laws: Legislating in the Culture of Li...
The purpose of this policy analysis was to examine the Infant Safe Haven Law and its many implicatio...
Adoption in the United States is a complex patchwork of law and practice that involves payments of n...
This article first offers a comparison between the stereotype dominated understanding of infanticide...
In seventeenth-century England, single women who killed their newborns were believed to have acted t...
An earlier version of this paper was presented by Professor Parness at the Third Annual Wells Confer...