Adopted Child Comes of Age

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A01=Lois Raynor
Adopted Child
adopted children
Adopted People
Adoptee Adjustment
adoptee psychological wellbeing
Adoption Agencies
adoption case studies
Adoption Experience
adoption outcomes research
adoptive families
Adoptive Family
Adoptive Family Life
Adoptive Mother
Adult Adjustment
Adult Adopted
adult adoptee life course analysis
Author_Lois Raynor
Birth Mother
Birth Parents
Birthday
Category=JKSN
Chronic
Direct Adoptions
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
family adjustment studies
Follow
follow-up study
foster care transitions
Foster Children
foster homes
Foster Parent
Foster Parent Adopters
Good Life
Great Britain
Held
Legal Adoption
longitudinal child welfare
Parent Adopters
parent and child
social services
social work
social work practice
SRN
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032065724
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 05 Nov 2023
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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How do adoptions really turn out? How do adopted children feel about the family they were given and the opportunities they were offered? To what extent do they fulfil their new parents’ expectations of them? And does it matter whether their adoption grew out of a fostering relationship or was considered right from the start as a permanent arrangement?

Originally published in 1980, the major follow-up study on which this book is based sought to answer these questions. The research involved 160 sets of parents and over 100 of their adopted children, now young adults. This was, in fact, the largest group of adult adoptees anywhere in the world to be interviewed and studied in a systematic way. As they look back over their life together, the parents and the young people explain what adopting or being adopted was like for them.

This title offers glimpses of adoptive family life over a period of more than twenty years, compares the views of the young people with those of their adopters and measures the factors which influenced the various outcomes. Particular attention is paid to the basis on which the child was originally placed, in order to shed light on the controversial subject, at the time, of whether a preliminary fostering period represents a useful safeguard.

The information gathered by Lois Raynor and her colleagues provided the feedback so long sought by social work teachers and by those practising social workers who had the responsibility for making long-term plans for children and for approving foster home or adoption applications at the time. Readers with personal experience of adoption will be interested in making their own comparisons, while prospective adopters will learn to avoid some pitfalls and to enjoy an adopted child as their own.

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