This Comment will propose eliminating the adoptive parent\u27s weight as a determinative factor in adoption proceedings, evaluating instead the parenting skills of the potential parents, as well as their ability to emotionally, physically, and financially care for the adopted child. Part II of this Comment will discuss the history of adoption law in the United States and show how this area of law arose out of the need to find loving homes for the overwhelming number of orphaned children in America. Part II will also describe the current adoption process to demonstrate how adoption agencies and the court system use discriminatory screening factors to give preference to ideal parents. Part III will provide an introduction to obesity and dis...
Adoption has long been seen as the "perfect solution" for numerous parties. Traditionally viewed, ad...
In the piece, Professor Brad Wilcox and I ask who should care for children when their biological par...
Part I will examine past and present attitudes regarding obesity in US society and will discuss the ...
This Comment will propose eliminating the adoptive parent\u27s weight as a determinative factor in a...
This comment will propose eliminating race and all factors that would be discriminatory in any other...
Due to the growing epidemic of obesity in the United States, courts have begun addressing the issue ...
Recent incidents of abortive uses of adoption statutes have pointed up the possible need for a healt...
The Article examines the role that legal representation of birth and prospective parents may or may ...
I. Introduction: Identifying the Controversy The mythology of adoption involves a scenario in which ...
Do judges have the authority to recognize decrees of foreign adoption? Since 1989, over 167,000 pare...
Adoption is governed by state law, which varies dramatically among states, and thus encourages forum...
In 2009, a South Carolina mother named Jerri Gray was charged with criminally neglecting her fourtee...
This paper responds to Michael Merry’s recent contribution on childhood obesity. Merry’s analysis hi...
Adoption processes in the United States, once based on the altruistic child welfare model, have morp...
In certain circumstances, the equitable adoption doctrine allows a person to inherit as the child of...
Adoption has long been seen as the "perfect solution" for numerous parties. Traditionally viewed, ad...
In the piece, Professor Brad Wilcox and I ask who should care for children when their biological par...
Part I will examine past and present attitudes regarding obesity in US society and will discuss the ...
This Comment will propose eliminating the adoptive parent\u27s weight as a determinative factor in a...
This comment will propose eliminating race and all factors that would be discriminatory in any other...
Due to the growing epidemic of obesity in the United States, courts have begun addressing the issue ...
Recent incidents of abortive uses of adoption statutes have pointed up the possible need for a healt...
The Article examines the role that legal representation of birth and prospective parents may or may ...
I. Introduction: Identifying the Controversy The mythology of adoption involves a scenario in which ...
Do judges have the authority to recognize decrees of foreign adoption? Since 1989, over 167,000 pare...
Adoption is governed by state law, which varies dramatically among states, and thus encourages forum...
In 2009, a South Carolina mother named Jerri Gray was charged with criminally neglecting her fourtee...
This paper responds to Michael Merry’s recent contribution on childhood obesity. Merry’s analysis hi...
Adoption processes in the United States, once based on the altruistic child welfare model, have morp...
In certain circumstances, the equitable adoption doctrine allows a person to inherit as the child of...
Adoption has long been seen as the "perfect solution" for numerous parties. Traditionally viewed, ad...
In the piece, Professor Brad Wilcox and I ask who should care for children when their biological par...
Part I will examine past and present attitudes regarding obesity in US society and will discuss the ...