Providing information on criminal activity and ethical violations committed by the international adoption industry.
Articles About International Adoption and Market Demand:
- Reverse Robinhoodism: Pitting Poor Against Affluent Women in the Adoption Industry (Mirah Riben and Bernadette Wright, PhD, Conducive, October/November 2009) [off-site link]
- The Price We All Pay: Human Trafficking in International Adoption (Kevin Minh Allen, Conducive, August/September 2009) [off-site link]
- Child Laundering: How the Intercountry Adoption System Legitimizes and Incentivizes the Practices of Buying, Trafficking, Kidnapping, and Stealing Children (David M. Smolin, Cumberland Law School) [off-site link]
- “Adoption is not the answer - the best thing for orphans is to help reunite them with family members” (Salima Pirani, The Toronto Star, November 2, 2006)
- Virtual land of the baby broker business (Sue Lowe, Sydney Morning Herald, December 16, 2003)
- Adoption: The Baby Trade (Ethan B. Kapstein, Foreign Affairs, November/December 2003. Vol 82, No. 6)
- Market Puts Price Tags on the Priceless: How Bundles of Joy Not For Sale Are Sold (Laura Mansnerus, New York Times, October 26, 1998)
International Adoption From Brazil
International Adoption From Cambodia:
International Adoption From China:
Excerpt: “The girls are often sold … to agencies that arrange foreign adoptions.”
- Stolen Chinese children rescued (Emily Buchanan, BBC News Video: October 28, 2009). [off-site link]
- Stolen babies a new industry in China’s villages (Carolyn Moynihan, Taiwan News, October 10, 2009)
- A young Chinese girl pines for her twin (Barbara Demick, Los Angeles Times, September 20, 2009)
- Chinese babies stolen by officials for foreign adoption (Barbara Demick, Los Angeles Times, September 20, 2009)
- Parents seek answers after children abducted (John Vause, CNN, August 10, 2009)
- China babies ‘sold for adoption’ (BBC News, July 2 2009)
- China’s Kidnapped Children (Video: Kidnapped children being sold in China, June 4, 2009) [off-site link]
- Kidnappers swoop on China’s girls (Michael Sheridan, The Sunday Times, May 31, 2009)
- Police in China Break Up Baby Trafficking Ring,, 40 Infants Rescued (Staff, AP News, September 7, 2007)
- Stealing Babies for Adoption: With U.S. Couples Eager to Adopt, Some Infants Are Abducted and Sold in China (Peter S. Goodman
Washington Post Foreign Service, Sunday, March 12, 2006)
- China halts baby trafficking ring (Francis Markus, BBC correspondent in Shanghai, July 13, 2004)
- China’s Baby Traffickers: In rural Yunnan, poverty and the strict family-planning policy spawn a harrowing trade in infants (Hannah Beech, Time Asia, January 8, 2001, Vol 157, No. 1) [off-site link]
International Adoption From Costa Rica: Child Smuggling from Guatemala:
International Adoption From Guatemala:
- Global Adoption Industry – Children as Commodities (DW-TV EUROPA, June 6, 2011)
- Guatemalan soldiers sold children in war (Sarah Grainger, Reuters, September 10, 2009)
- DNA tests confirm first stolen baby in troubled Guatemalan adoption system (Deborah Bonello, Los Angeles Times, July 24, 2008)
- U.S. Adoptions Fueled by Guatemalan Kidnappings (Haroldo Martinez and Russell Goldman, ABC News, May 13, 2008)
- Cleaning Up International Adoptions (Mica Rosenberg/Antigua, Time Inc., Aug. 29, 2007)
- Army Abducted Guatemalan Children Adopted in 1980s (Noel Randewich, Reuters, June 21, 2004)
- Canadian report on baby-trafficking at centre of Guatemala trial (CBC News, January 22, 2004)
- Adoption tactics hurt Guatemalans (Letta Tayler, Newsday, November 16, 2003)
International Adoption From Haiti:
International Adoption from India:
- In search of the stolen children: Despite a wave of scandals, child-trafficking remains a huge problem for India (Matt Wade, Sydney Morning Herald, August 30, 2008)
- ‘Stolen boy’ may be one of dozens (Dutchnews.nl, May 23, 2007)
- Investigation into illegal adoption (Expatica Netherlands, May 23, 2007)
- India demands return of adopted child (Expatica Netherlands, May 22, 2007)
International Adoption From Kenya :
International Adoption From Korea
Excerpt: “‘According to the questionnaire that we distribute at the orientation interview, 90 percent want to keep the babies, says Kim Yongsook, the director of Ae Ran Won. But after counseling, maybe 10 per cent will keep them. We suggest that it’s not a good idea to keep the baby‘…. After delivery at a hospital, the baby is taken from the mother.. ” (An adoption agency director openly admits to coercing Korean mothers)
International Adoption From Liberia
International Adoption From Nigeria
International Adoption From Samoa
International Adoption From Vietnam
United Nations Reports Pertaining to Child Trafficking and International Adoption
Excerpt: “During the course of 2002, the Special Rapporteur received many complaints relating to allegedly fraudulent adoption practices. Where such practices have the effect that the child becomes the object of a commercial transaction, the Special Rapporteur, like his predecessor, considers that such cases fall within the “sale” element of his mandate. The Special Rapporteur was shocked to learn of the plethora of human rights abuses which appear to permeate the adoption systems of many countries” (p. 25).
URL: http://sites.google.com/site/internationaladoptionfacts/
OR http://tinyurl.com/intadopt
This site is provided solely for the non-profit dissemination of information for educational and research purposes and is not intended for any commercial purpose. Please support the news agencies and authors whose work is presented here. Use the comments form to suggest articles that should be included in this collection.
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Susie
June 7, 2011 at 3:16 pm
LOL! I just asked Cedar if there was somewhere I could link to all this info on my blog! I’m going to link to you, this is a lot of great info.
vampporcupine
June 7, 2011 at 3:51 pm
it was incredible info!
Adoption Critic
June 10, 2011 at 12:04 pm
Now, how many seconds do you think this information would stay up on the “Adoption” board at Cafemom before being taken down?
http://sites.google.com/site/internationaladoptionfacts/
vampporcupine
June 10, 2011 at 8:23 am
Lol, ummm….might make it five mins.