This article reports the results of a qualitative study that sought the perspectives of birth parents and adoptive parents following reunification or adoption of children from foster care. Using a participatory action design that actively involved young adults formerly in foster care and parents in the design and implementation of the study, the study focused on the consumers’ perspectives on several issues related to permanency. The article reports findings from interviews with a subset of 27 birth and adoptive families in New York City who were asked about their post-permanency experiences and from interviews with 38 child welfare professionals who were asked to respond to the parents’ perspectives. The article offers directions for child...
A questionaire was developed and given to post-adoptive parents with the results to be used as a gui...
This article, which describes a component of a larger research project, focuses on participants' per...
Children are placed in adoptive families to provide permanence when they are unable to grow up with ...
This article reports the results of a qualitative study that sought the perspectives of birth parent...
The Adoption and Safe Families Act (ASFA, 1997) represented an emerging consensus that foster care s...
Nearly 800,000 children spend time in foster care each year, with many children experiencing lengthy...
Permanency is a pillar of child welfare law; children generally do better with legally permanent car...
Adoption has increased in importance as both an exit goal and exit outcome for 20-25% of children in...
For more than two decades, child welfare scholars, practitioners, and advocates involved with the U....
Historically, promoting family permanence (e.g., keeping the original parent-children relationships ...
The Adoption and Safe Families Act (P.L. 105-89; ASFA) passed into federal law in 1997. ASFA emphasi...
This research is about what post-adoption services exist, what sort of supports and services adoptiv...
This study reported on the connection between the permanency a youth in the foster care system exper...
This article explores the relationship between permanency, the dominant child welfare policy, and th...
This article presents the results of a qualitative study that explores parenting skills when a child...
A questionaire was developed and given to post-adoptive parents with the results to be used as a gui...
This article, which describes a component of a larger research project, focuses on participants' per...
Children are placed in adoptive families to provide permanence when they are unable to grow up with ...
This article reports the results of a qualitative study that sought the perspectives of birth parent...
The Adoption and Safe Families Act (ASFA, 1997) represented an emerging consensus that foster care s...
Nearly 800,000 children spend time in foster care each year, with many children experiencing lengthy...
Permanency is a pillar of child welfare law; children generally do better with legally permanent car...
Adoption has increased in importance as both an exit goal and exit outcome for 20-25% of children in...
For more than two decades, child welfare scholars, practitioners, and advocates involved with the U....
Historically, promoting family permanence (e.g., keeping the original parent-children relationships ...
The Adoption and Safe Families Act (P.L. 105-89; ASFA) passed into federal law in 1997. ASFA emphasi...
This research is about what post-adoption services exist, what sort of supports and services adoptiv...
This study reported on the connection between the permanency a youth in the foster care system exper...
This article explores the relationship between permanency, the dominant child welfare policy, and th...
This article presents the results of a qualitative study that explores parenting skills when a child...
A questionaire was developed and given to post-adoptive parents with the results to be used as a gui...
This article, which describes a component of a larger research project, focuses on participants' per...
Children are placed in adoptive families to provide permanence when they are unable to grow up with ...