Publication | Closed Access
Letting Her Go: Western Adoptive Families’ Search and Reunion With Chinese Birth Parents
31
Citations
28
References
2014
Year
EthnicityHuman MigrationAdopted ChildrenEast Asian StudiesEducationChinese Birth ParentsFamily FormationCultural StudiesFamily RelationshipLanguage StudiesFamily RelationshipsFamily DiversityBirth ParentsAdopted IndividualsChild DevelopmentChinese CultureAnthropologyIntergenerational RelationCultural Anthropology
This is the first study to investigate the trend of adopted individuals from China who search for and reunite with their birth parents. The authors suggest that the closed nature of China's international adoption program and growing ethical concerns about children's true origins impact the desire to search. Due to the generally younger ages of Chinese adoptees, adoptive parents have taken an unprecedentedly proactive role in this process. This article relies on in-depth interviews with adopted children and adoptive parents from seven Western families who reunited with Chinese birth parents. Interviews focused on the decision to search and methods used; the initial reunion; the development of bonds between adoptive and birth families; and post-reunion views of searching.
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