Acknowledgments | |
Introduction | p. 1 |
History of Adoption in the United States | p. 7 |
An act to Provide for the Adoption of Children (1851) | p. 9 |
Society's Children: The Care of Indigent Youngsters in New York City, 1875-1903 | p. 11 |
Perfect Substitutes or the Real Thing? | p. 19 |
Like Our Very Own: Adoption and the Changing Culture of Motherhood, 1851-1950 | p. 25 |
Fallen Women, Problem Girls: Unmarried Mothers and the Professionalization of Social Work, 1890-1945 | p. 29 |
Creating Adoptive Families: Legal and Psychological Requirements and Consequences | p. 33 |
State and Federal Adoption Laws | p. 37 |
Code of Ethics | p. 43 |
Adoption as a Child Welfare Service: CWLA 2000 Standards | p. 45 |
Analysis of the Proposed Uniform Adoption Act (UAA) of 1994 | p. 47 |
Family Ties: Solving the Constitutional Dilemma of the Faultless Father | p. 52 |
Proposed Uniform Adoption Act (UAA) of 1994 | p. 63 |
Adoption Agencies and the Search for the Ideal Family, 1918-1965 | p. 64 |
Adoption and the Parental Screening System | p. 72 |
Proposed Uniform Adoption Act (UAA) of 1994 | p. 77 |
Adoptees' Inheritance Rights | p. 78 |
Is Adoption a Risk Factor for the Development of Adjustment Problems? | p. 80 |
Coming to Terms with Adoption: The Construction of Identity from Adolescence into Adulthood | p. 84 |
Nature and Nurture: A New Look at How Families Work | p. 85 |
Nature in Adoptive Parenthood | p. 88 |
Foster Care and Informal Adoption | p. 91 |
Smith v. Organization of Foster Families for Equality and Reform (O.F.F.E.R.) (U.S. 1977) | p. 95 |
In re G.C. (Pa. 1999) | p. 100 |
Rodriguez v. McLoughlin (S.D.N.Y. 1999), reversed (2d Cir. N.Y. 2000) | p. 102 |
In re Jasmon O. (Cal. 1994) | p. 106 |
Parents' Rights vs. Children's Interests: The Case of the Foster Child | p. 108 |
When Children Cannot Remain Home: Foster Family Care and Kinship Care | p. 111 |
Taking Adoption Seriously: Radical Revolution or Modest Revisionism? | p. 115 |
The Extended Family System in the Black Community: A Child-Centered Model for Adoption Policy | p. 119 |
Adoption and Confidentiality | p. 123 |
Adoption and Change of Name: General Statutes of Minnesota (1917) | p. 125 |
The Sealed Adoption Records Controversy in Historical Perspective: The Case of the Children's Home Society of Washington, 1895-1988 | p. 126 |
We Have a Long Way to Go: Attitudes toward Adoption | p. 134 |
The Idea of Adoption: An Inquiry into the History of Adult Adoptee Access to Birth Records | p. 136 |
Doe v. Sundquist (6th Cir. Tenn. 1997) | p. 142 |
State Legislation and Mutual Consent Registries | p. 145 |
The Basic Bastard | p. 146 |
CWLA Standards: Policy Changes, 1973-2000 | p. 149 |
Adoption, Identity, and the Constitution: The Case for Opening Closed Records | p. 153 |
Adoption with Continuing Contact: "Open Adoption" | p. 157 |
Overview of Legal Status of Post-Adoption Contact Agreements | p. 159 |
Perspectives on Open Adoption | p. 163 |
In re Adoption of Vito (Mass. 2000) | p. 167 |
Guidelines for Public Policy and State Legislation Governing Permanence for Children | p. 172 |
Post-Adoption Contact: CWLA 2000 Standards | p. 174 |
Increasing Options to Improve Permanency: Considerations in Drafting an Adoption with Contact Statute | p. 175 |
Kinship with Strangers: Adoption and Interpretations of Kinship in American Culture | p. 177 |
The Frontiers of Adoption | p. 185 |
The What and Why of the Multiethnic Placement Act (MEPA) | p. 189 |
"Are You My Mother?": Conceptualizing Children's Identity Rights in Transracial Adoptions | p. 194 |
The Color of Desire: Fulfilling Adoptive Parents' Racial Preferences through Discriminatory State Action | p. 200 |
Private Race Preferences in Family Formation | p. 205 |
Racial Geographies | p. 208 |
Does a Child Have a Right to a Certain Identity? | p. 211 |
Intercountry Adoption: A Frontier without Boundaries | p. 215 |
Who Are Indian Children within the Scope of the Federal Indian Child Welfare Act (ICWA)? | p. 221 |
Pigs in Heaven: A Parable of Native American Adoption under the Indian Child Welfare Act | p. 228 |
Second Parent Adoptions Protect Children with Two Mothers or Two Fathers | p. 235 |
State Appeals Court Rulings That Deny or Approve Second Parent Adoptions by Same-Sex Couples | p. 239 |
(How) Does the Sexual Orientation of Parents Matter? | p. 248 |
Single Parent Adoptions | p. 252 |
Feminism | p. 257 |
Re-expressing Parenthood | p. 259 |
Transracial and International Adoption: Mothers, Hierarchy, Race, and Feminist Legal Theory | p. 265 |
Family Issue(s) | p. 270 |
"O Wind, Remind Him That I Have No Child": Infertility and Feminist Jurisprudence | p. 273 |
Adoption, Biological Essentialism, and Feminist Theory | p. 280 |
Other Perspectives on Adoption | p. 283 |
Johnson v. Calvert (Cal. 1993) | p. 287 |
In re Nicholas H. (Cal. 2002) | p. 291 |
Note on the Revised Uniform Parentage Act (UPA) of 2002 | p. 294 |
Principles of the Law of Family Dissolution | p. 297 |
From Coitus to Commerce: Legal and Social Consequences of Noncoital Reproduction | p. 299 |
Law Making for Baby Making: An Interpretive Approach to the Determination of Legal Parentage | p. 306 |
Considerations against Donor Anonymity in Collaborative Procreation | p. 310 |
The Jurisprudence of Genetics | p. 313 |
Market-Inalienability | p. 319 |
The Effect of Transactions Costs on the Market for Babies | p. 324 |
Sources | p. 329 |
Index | p. 337 |
About the Editors | p. 349 |
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