Nobody’s Children: Abuse and Neglect, Foster Drift, and the Adoption Alternative

Nobody's Children: Abuse and Neglect, Foster Drift, and the Adoption Alternative

From Library Journal
The book’s jacket calls this an “intense look at child welfare policies on abuse and neglect.” Precisely. Bartholet’s subject is too weighty for casual reading and cannot be easily digested, but it does not falter in its criticisms of American child welfare policy. Examining legislation from all parts of the United States, Bartholet questions why “family preservation ideology still reigns supreme when children rather than adult women are involved.” The reader is left with a multitude of questions and concerns about the way U.S. adoption policy is currently working, questions that are catalysts for invoking the changes that Bartholet espouses. Clear and consistent, this is recommended for public and academic libraries.ASheila Devaney, North Carolina State Univ. Libs., Raleigh Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc.
–This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
From Kirkus Reviews
A disturbing look at how the live
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One Response to “Nobody’s Children: Abuse and Neglect, Foster Drift, and the Adoption Alternative”

  1. Taariq says:

    This review is from: NOBODY’S CHILDREN: Abuse and Neglect, Foster Drift, and the Adoption Alternative (Hardcover)

    I am a mother of two birth children and one adopted child, adopted from foster care at age 13. I stumbled across this book in a bookstore one rainy day when I had hit the emotional low-point in my own adoption journey. I read it while I was struggling with the endless and maddening redtape and delays entailed in getting our foster child out of “the system” forever. “Nobody’s Children” speaks to hundreds of thousands of Americans whose hearts and beliefs nudge them to contemplate domestic adoption, yet who encounter cultural and procedural barriers that discourage most from considering adoption from the foster care system. This is a carefully-researched and footnoted work by a distinguished former civil rights attorney–whose career included work at the NAACP Legal Defense and Education Fund and now Harvard Law School, where she teaches today. The author is herself both an adoptive and biological parent. Her book gave me new hope. I was inspired by it to work to help bring about the cultural shifts and procedural reforms described in this book, changes that will be required if our nation is truly serious about ending the tragedy (and travesty) of kids languishing in long-term foster care. Ignore reviews by some who utterly mischaracterize Bartholet’s arguments. She, like Patrick Murphy before her, fully acknowledge that the vast majority of poor and minority families raise their children well and lovingly, and that far more social resources should be directed toward addiction treatment and supporting stressed-out birth mothers so they can keep their babies. Defenseless, innocent children are not, however, the chattel (private property) of their birth parents. All of us, as a civilized people, must speak out against policies and practices that severely limit a child’s chance to be adopted after being subjected to acts of torture or repeated abuse and neglect. To fix “the system” and its horrors, more Americans need to open their homes to the children trapped in it. How to persuade people to consider adopting from foster care? Bartholet suggests a first step: imagine a system that promotes adoption as the best, instead of a second best, way to build a family. A book for dreamers and “doers” both.

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