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41
https://www.brusselstimes.com/838673/catholic-church-put-up-30000-children-for-adoption-without-mothers-consent

Catholic Church put up 30,000 children for adoption without mothers' consent
Thursday, 14 December 2023
By The Brussels Times with Belga

The Catholic Church sold around 30,000 children to adoptive parents without their mother's consent or knowledge, new testimonies reported by Het Laatste Nieuws reveal.  Created just after World War Two, institutions run by nuns took in underage girls and pregnant unmarried women until the late 1980s. These women were subjected to unpaid labour, humiliating conditions, and in some cases, sexual abuse.  During childbirth, some women were given general anaesthetic while others had to wear a mask all ways to prevent mothers from seeing their child, who were immediately separated after birth. Some women were even sterilised. Others were forced to sign a document renouncing their child or were told the child was stillborn.  The children were then sold for large sums between 10,000 and 30,000 Belgian francs (roughly between ?250 and ?750), sometimes much more to adoptive families.  Unkept or destroyed files are now making reunion processes extremely difficult, says Debby Mattys (57), who was put up for adoption by the nuns and spent over 20 years looking for her birth mother. "My mother was 18 years old when she had an unwanted pregnancy," she told Het Laaste Nieuws.

"The Church has a crushing responsibility. Not just for what happened in the past even now they still abuse power by allowing files to disappear or because they do not actively cooperate in the inspection of files. Apologies are nice, but they don't buy us anything."

In 2015, the Bishops' Conference apologised to the victims of forced adoptions in Catholic institutions at the Flemish Parliament.  In response to recent testimonies, the bishops have expressed their compassion for victims' pain and trauma. The Church is calling for an independent investigation into the conditions described by the women involved.
42
https://www.glamourmagazine.co.uk/article/failed-adoption

As someone who was adopted as a baby, I'm here to tell you that no child should be treated like an unwanted Christmas gift, no matter how much trauma we come with

?Adoption is not like pick-n-mix."

By Michele Theil
3 December 2021

Earlier this week, BBC Woman?s Hour posted a clip of their interview with former BBC journalist Eleanor Bradford to talk about her experiences of adoption, and specifically about her ?heartbreaking? decision to return her adopted child to care after eight years.  I am an adoptee myself, who was lucky to be adopted shortly after birth and given a better life than I probably would have had elsewhere. When I saw this pop up on Twitter, I was curious, but what she said appalled me. Bradford said that she decided to give her son back into care because of his behavioural issues, which caused problems for her other son (they are biological brothers), in what is termed by professionals as a ?failed adoption.?  Failed adoptions do not happen often, with chief executive at the charity Adoption UK saying that ?only around 3 to 4%? occur each year.

But, what happens in these situations are extremely private and are usually on the recommendation of professionals who feel that a child might be better served elsewhere. It is incredibly rare that an adoptive mother would choose to ?return? their child to care like an unwanted Christmas gift.  She mentioned that though the family feels ?an emptiness? from the absence of her son, she said it wasn?t ?entirely negative? because she now could place her bag on the table. In a piece written for The Sunday Times over the weekend, Bradford explained that her son was ?determined to create a chaotic environment,? and implied that he was prone to theft, thus forcing her to lock away her purse and hide the key from him. Luckily for her, she no longer has to do that!  Though Bradford claims this decision was best for all involved, and has ?reset? her relationship with her son, she entirely overlooked the trauma associated with this decision, compounding the feelings of abandonment he likely experienced prior to adoption.  Plus, there has been a lack of consideration as to how his younger brother might feel about this. Bradford?s decision to adopt both boys was to keep them from being separated in the first place, but because one didn?t turn out perfect, the brothers were separated anyway.  She wrote, ?the younger one is a joy to parent: a poster boy for adoption,? which is an abhorrent way to discuss adoption.

Adoption is not like pick-n-mix, you don?t get to throw away the imperfect ones. What about the long-lasting trauma for the younger child, who may feel like every little mistake could be the reason he is sent away like his brother?

I was never a ?perfect child?, and in many respects, I certainly do not live up to some expectations that were set for me at a young age. My mum wanted me to be a lawyer, live at home in Hong Kong, and live up to the ideal of a ?perfect Chinese daughter?. Instead, I am a journalist living in the U.K, miles away from being a ?perfect Chinese daughter? but this isn?t a reason for abandonment.  Bradford also said: ?It?s ironic that we have done so much to give those children a better life, and yet when it goes wrong, we are unsupported, and we can?t speak out.?, arguing that there is a taboo faced by people who go through ?failed adoptions.?

Her rhetoric, and the framing of her situation by the BBC, suggests that she is a kind-hearted person who fell victim to the failures of the adoption and care system, with her distress being more paramount than the care deserved by her child.   Centring herself in the narrative, she did not mention how her son reacted to being ?left behind? again, forced back into care after eight years with who he thought was his ?forever family?. She adds that she ?is still his mum?, and that the family stay in regular contact with him. But children, whether adopted or biological, should not be treated this way.

The ?stigma? that Bradford says she has faced for her decision is well and truly justified: adopted children should not be treated like a crappy gift from a distant relative, we can?t be sent back for store credit.  We deserve respect and we deserve to have loving families who will support us through ups and downs, just like you would a biological child. If a biological child was acting out and exhibiting ?behavioural issues,? you would likely seek counselling or behavioural adjustment therapy, perhaps send them to a new school with more structure, or a number of other solutions you wouldn?t give them away or leave them to fend for themselves.  Parents face a myriad of issues from their children, which can involve drinking, drugs, teenage pregnancy, bad grades, stealing, or anything else they may disapprove of. What they do in such situations is individual to the needs of the parent and the child, but I would bet that the majority of parents out there would stand by and support their children unconditionally, if they can, because that?s their child. Adopted children should not be treated differently when an adoptive parent signs on the dotted line agreeing to care for that child, they become yours for life.  As an adoptee who definitely ticked off almost every box on the ?difficult teenager? checklist, I cannot be more thankful that my adoptive parents did not make the same decision as Bradford. I often stayed out all night drinking, would shoplift for the thrill, and have experimented with drugs. But, not once did they ever consider ?sending me back? because I was their child, for better or for worse.  There are so many families in the UK who want children and I?m sure many of them would find Bradford?s decision abhorrent as they would do anything to have a child, including one that may have a disability or be neurodivergent, like her son. But, unlike most of them, she gave up on helping her child overcome the challenges that he faced.  I am not the only person, nor the only adoptee who feels this way. Deputy Editor of The Face Magazine Jessica Morgan tweeted yesterday: ?As someone who is adopted, I find this woman absolutely repulsive. Children are not toys, nor are they disposable like this. If you adopt a child, you do the work. Yes, we come with baggage, trauma, issues, even mental health issues and putting them back in care only hurts them more.?

There are countless more tweets and reactions to Bradford?s story, all expressing the same shock and disapproval at her son being sent back to care, as well as her choice to publicly announce it like it is something to be proud of.  Adoption is a very noble prospect, and those that can give children a home are to be lauded. But, giving away your adopted child just because you couldn?t deal with them is not acceptable, and it is important to remember that adoptees are not toys, they are real people who will be devastatingly affected by these decisions.
43
https://www.irishcentral.com/roots/history/jane-russell-adopt-irish-baby

Actress Jane Russell's adoption of Irish baby nearly ended her career
The glamourous Hollywood star?s career nearly came to an end after she controversially adopted an Irish baby in 1951.
James Wilson
@jameswilson1919
Feb 03, 2023

Hollywood star Jane Russell?s adoption of an Irishwoman?s child in 1952 nearly ended the actress?s career.  Russell had already adopted a girl with her husband, NFL quarterback, and kicker Bob Waterfield, but wanted to expand their family, according to TheJournal.ie.  News of the star?s desire for another child reached Hannah McDermott, a Derry woman then living in London with her husband and young son. Reportedly Hannah offered her custody of baby Thomas on condition that Jane and Bob provided him with a good home, love, and education.  When the news made the papers, the controversy rippled across the world and young McDermott suddenly found her home in London besieged by photographers.  Local historian Willie Deery told the Belfast Telegraph he believes McDermott was motivated out of love for her child, ?Hannah came in for a lot of criticism, but I think what she did was out of love for her child.  And the adoption caused Jane Russell all sorts of grief. Howard Hughes thought all the bad press would finish her and he ordered her to return the boy, but she stood her ground and refused to give up the child.?

Baby Thomas was issued with a passport by Ireland?s London Embassy where staff were oblivious to the child?s true need for documentation. After the scandal broke, a Government memo circulated claiming that the entire incident was a ?publicity stunt? by Russell and that one of the guarantors for the passport?s application had explicitly stated the baby was not being adopted.  And it was not just Irish civil servants who had had the wool pulled over their eyes. British legislation had come into force the year before banning such adoptions and Home Secretary (Justice Minister) Sir Maxwell Fyfe told Parliament nine days after the ?adoption? that authorities believed the child was traveling to America for a three-month ?holiday?.  Today, both Bob Waterfield and Jane Russell have passed away, and their son Thomas remains in the United States, reportedly living in Arizona.  He was one of thousands of Irish children adopted by American couples during the 1950s. Most of them, unlike Thomas, were born outside wedlock and state papers reveal that as many as ten a month were placed in US homes.  Back then, the Irish Government played little role in the practice, restricting themselves to issuing each child with a passport, trusting the Catholic Church?s vetting of prospective parents.  As most were born out of wedlock and living in homes, one Minister for Justice Gerald Boland wrote that he ?favored the sending of children to America for adoption in suitable homes where the alternative would be life in an institution in this country?.

It was an attitude not uttered in public but one that quietly prevailed in the Irish Government, so much so that they did everything to facilitate such adoptions. One memo warned that it would be, ?quite embarrassing if, in some case, a child had to be left in this country owing to the impossibility of issuing a passport in time?.

Disturbingly, Irish diplomats even wrote boastful memos back to Dublin that ?Moreover, there is no ?color? problem here [in Ireland] so that intending foster parents in the US know that Irish children are ?guaranteed? in that respect.?

Subsequently, it?s been revealed that the vetting process in America was not as above-board as the Irish Government assumed. Monsignor O?Grady of the Catholic Charities admitted in 1956 that some of the charity?s adoptions had been ?irregular? and organized by a ?commercial operator? in Texas and Wisconsin?.  The idea of an Irish child being bought and sold clearly rattled Ireland?s Department of External Affairs and in the wake of the Russell case a letter between London and Dublin was fired off stating, ?I have taken an extreme case for my example but the fact is that, if any child who left this country for adoption in America figured in an unsavory press campaign, racket or other exposure, it is this Department that would face the music.?

Nevertheless, the practice continued right up until 1970. In 2013 a British film, "Philomena," was released starring Dame Judi Dench dramatizing the story of a mother who goes in search of her son in America some 60 years after his forced adoption in Ireland.

* Originally published in Jan 2017. Updated in February 2023.
44
https://www.joe.ie/news/paul-redmond-pope-francis-crash-course-magdalene-laundry-638178?utm_source=facebook&fbclid=IwAR01Cx3XK5Vh-J2c3Ed0pZ084KBCW0bEv74Rh8pWz_kIX_rzQ_r0pk1VA90

Clerical abuse survivor Paul Redmond explains why he had to give Pope Francis "crash course" on Magdalene Laundries

"Ireland is unique in the 20th century in having such institutions."

Chairperson of the Coalition of Mother and Baby Home Survivors Paul Redmond has clarified why he had to give Pope Francis a "crash course" on the history of the Magdalene Laundries and industrial schools during their meeting on Saturday.  Redmond was one of eight clerical abuse survivors that met with Pope Francis during what he described as a "very intense" weekend.  In conversation with Caitriona Perry on RT? News: Six One on Sunday evening, Redmond noted that the Pope didn't have adequate knowledge of institutional abuse in Ireland.  "Just to clarify that, because people seem quite puzzled by that, that the Pope was unfamiliar with with a Magdalene Laundry was or an industrial school; Ireland is unique in the 20th century in having such institutions," Redmond began.

"They really started in Victorian Britain. We obviously inherited them, but by 1900 the British had realised that large scale institutional care simply doesn't work, and they started closing down their institutions.  The Catholic Church had taken them over in Ireland and we kept them right into the 1980s and into the 1990s, so they're quite unique to Ireland. The Pope had no - there's no parallel in Argentina or South America with these sort of institutions.  One of the survivors was explaining what happened to her in an industrial school and I actually had to jump in and spend three or four minutes giving the Pope a crash course in what Irish institutions were and what happened."

Redmond noted that he gave the Pope "a number of facts and figures" and upon detailing specific incidences, Pope Francis "put his hands up to his head a couple of times" and was "clearly shocked and taken aback" at what he was hearing.  Asked how he felt when Pope Francis asked for forgiveness of abuse carried out by the church in Ireland, Redmond said that he felt some sense of relief.  "We went in asking for what we've been asking for from church and state for years, which is a full acknowledgement, apology and a redress package for survivors particularly because our community is generally elderly and dying.  We didn't expect to get that," Redmond continued. "The fact that he asked for forgiveness was a step in the right direction.  What we were hoping for was that he would address the issue of the fact that natural mothers and to some extent, adoptees were told back in the day that the search and look for reunion was immortal sin and they would burn in hell for it, and that it was a criminal offence and illegal."

Redmond acknowledged that the Pope took the requests and sentiment of the survivors on board and addressed it fully during his mass at the Phoenix Park.  "I am delighted about that," said Paul. "That is definitely a huge step forward for our community. A lot of us suffer in silence."

It was underlined that despite this progress, Pope Francis didn't offer a definitive apology.  "No, and we knew he never would any more than the government will, or any of the individual orders or nuns," said Redmond.

"An apology is a legal admission of liability and they simply will not do that. The church and state are going to have to be dragged to that kicking and screaming."
45
https://www.room151.co.uk/funding/rise-childrens-social-care-placements/

1,000% rise in five years in number of children?s social care placements costing ?10,000 per week
by Jason Holland
in 151 News ? Funding ? Social care
29 Nov, 2023

A survey of councils conducted by the Local Government Association has revealed a startling rise in the cost of children?s social care placements.  The number of such placements costing ?10,000 or more per week has risen by over 1,000% in five years.  There were 120 of these placements in 2018/19, rising to 1,510 in 2022/23, while the proportion of councils with at least one children?s social care placement has increased from 23% to 91% over the same period.  The survey found that the highest cost placement was ?63,000 a week. For most councils the highest cost fell between ?9,600 and ?32,500 a week.  A lack of choice in placements is driving the high prices, with nearly every council 98 per cent citing this as a cause.  Some 93% of councils also highlighted children needing help with increasingly complex needs, including mental health needs or exhibiting challenging behaviours, as a factor.  The Local Government Association said the findings demonstrated a ?broken? market for children?s social care placements, and called for ?urgent investment in provision that can best meet children?s needs?, on behalf of councils.

The organisation said there were three key areas for government action, including rolling out planned Department for Education programmes on the recruitment and retention of foster carers to all councils.  The LGA also called for the expansion of children?s homes through capital investment, recruitment and professional development of children?s homes workers and working with the voluntary and community sector.  The third action area is working with DHSC and NHS England on both inpatient mental health facilities and joint delivery of placements for children with complex mental health needs, the LGA said.  The LGA added that it is ?vital? that councils ?are able to invest in earlier support for children and families to reduce the number of children who need to be in the care of their council, and that councils are provided with longer term funding settlements to enable them to plan ahead?.

The LGA is calling for urgent funding for children?s social care in the upcoming provisional Local Government Finance Settlement. It warned the lack of investment in the Autumn Statement ?risked councils? ability to provide the critical care and support that children rely on every day?.

Louise Gittins, chair of the LGA?s Children and Young People Board, said: ?With more children needing help with increasingly complex and challenging needs, what is most important is ensuring they get the best care and support. It is concerning that in many cases, a lack of choice means provision is not fully meeting children?s needs.  The astronomical costs of care placements mean there is less money available for councils to spend on earlier support for children and families.  These findings are indicative of a broken market for children?s social care placements, but it doesn?t have to remain this way. With cross-government support, it is possible to make sure we have the right homes for all of the children in our care.?
46
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/new-brunswick/nb-no-apology-unwed-mothers-1.5247545?__vfz=medium%3Dsharebar&fbclid=IwAR0DhFIRSnS98gwz2NXVRHX6PpbCPDnLvDCRk1k4uQU7zT9tjSn-ovGsr3I

'Bad girls': Remembering when unwed mothers were told to forget their babies
Parliament doesn't answer call to apologize to women forced to give up their children
Rachel Cave ? CBC News ? Posted: Aug 16, 2019 4:00 AM EDT | Last Updated: August 16, 2019

Marie Crouse, who gave up her baby for adoption when she was 15, says she's not waiting to hear "sorry" from Ottawa, even though a Senate committee says thousands of Canadian women like her are owed an apology for the way they were treated in the postwar years for getting pregnant outside marriage.  The committee's report, titled "The Shame is Ours" tabled July 19, 2018, gave Parliament one year to acknowledge the impact of "unethical adoption practices" inflicted on women in church-run maternity homes that received federal funding across the country.   The committee heard emotional testimony from mothers who said they felt banished from their communities, pressured into giving up their parental rights and warned not to go looking for their babies, who would never forgive them their sins.  The Senate called on the federal government to acknowledge and apologize to the estimated 350,000 women who were forced to give up their babies for adoption between 1945 and 1971, simply because they were not married.

School principal noticed

Crouse watched the hearings in March from her home in Wakefield, north of Woodstock, and some of what she heard sounded like her story.  The oldest of eight children, Crouse said she had a rebellious side and was dating boys by age 14.  Neither her father, who hauled logs, nor her homemaker mother taught her the facts of life, she said, and the public schools did not fill in the gaps.  "The only sex education you got was in the back seat of a car or from your friends who didn't know much more than you did," said Crouse.

When she was in Grade 10, the principal of Hartland High School called her into his office and told her she couldn't attend classes anymore because her pregnancy was showing.  Crouse refused to believe she was pregnant.  In December of that year, 1962, her father hired someone to drive Crouse to Saint John in the company of her mother, who dropped her off at the Evangeline Home run by the Salvation Army.  "They had to get me out of town before anybody knew that I was pregnant," Crouse said. "That would have been their shame."

Growing up in Coldstream, Crouse had never travelled farther than Woodstock.  According to a historical sketch from the Provincial Archives, the hospital was then working solely for unmarried mothers, principally from New Brunswick and Prince Edward Island, although girls were also accepted from Nova Scotia, Quebec, Ontario, Newfoundland, and the western provinces, as well as Maine and Florida.   

'We should have never gotten pregnant'

Crouse remembers living on the third floor of the Princess Street building for about three months, along with at least two dozen other girls who came and went at any given time. Crouse says they all received some religious instruction.

And she says, one by one, they would be called into the Salvation Army captain's office, where Crouse remembers being asked, "how we got into this and what our plans were."

"I hate to say brainwashed," said Crouse recalling these talks. "But it was a lot to the fact that we were bad girls. We should not have had sex without being married. We should have never gotten pregnant.  And we were told we should never look for these babies because these babies would never want to know us because we were bad."

After giving birth to a daughter on March 3, 1963, and naming her Michelle, Crouse remained in the home for 14 days and was expected to change the baby and feed her.  On reflection, she thinks it was a form of punishment allowing young mothers to bond with infants before "ripping them away."  As her final act of rebellion, and in defiance of the Evangeline Home's rules against taking pictures, Crouse purchased a small camera in a nearby shop. She persuaded a nurse to take a picture of her, holding her daughter on her last day in Saint John.  She wouldn't see Michelle again for 28 years.

Someday, I'll find her

Crouse knew she wasn't going to be taking the baby home with her, but she can't remember being informed about adoption or signing a form giving up her parental rights.  Instead of obeying the instructions to "forget this ever happened," Crouse said, she went looking for her daughter in the 1980s.

However, New Brunswick's sealed records policy prevented her from seeing the names of her daughter's adoptive parents.  By then, Ron and Irma Getchell had moved to the United States and had renamed the baby, Carolynne.  Crouse turned to Parent Finders, a volunteer group that was actively working to reunite adopted children and their birth parents. In the years before Facebook, the group relied heavily on church records, obituaries and word of mouth to solve their cases.  In the end, it was Crouse's daughter who found her, by phoning the province's post-adoption services department. While the province had a policy of "protecting" the identities of individuals involved in adoptions, once a child turned 19, he or she could register their consent to be found.  That's how Carolynne was finally put in touch with Crouse, and they met for the first time in 1991, when Carolynne was 28 years old.  Their relationship is strong to this day, Crouse said, and Carolynne was visiting from New Hampshire just last week.

Detective work as therapy

By 1997, Crouse had taken on the unpaid position of president of Parent Finders and today, at age 72, she sees no retirement on the horizon.  According to her records, she and her team solved more than 500 cases over the past 22 years and have another 30 pending.  On April 1, 2018, New Brunswick moved to modernize its records policy, allowing adult adoptees to access the names of their birth parents.  But Crouse is convinced her searchers will stay busy.   "A name is sometimes just the start," she says.

"People marry, they change their names, they move away and sometimes they move out of the country," said Crouse, who has tracked down individuals living as far away as Puerto Rico and Bolivia.

She said people still need help to fill out forms and make sensitive phone calls.  "And that's more help than anything from the Senate," she said.

No apology from the Salvation Army

The Salvation Army, which ran the Evangeline Home in Saint John from 1898 to 1978, declined an interview.  An emailed statement sent from Jamie Locke, divisional secretary for public relations, said the Salvation Army did present a brief to the Senate committee based on results from an internal review it conducted in 2013, which found the organization had no legal or practical role in the adoption process itself.  "Instead the Salvation Army provided safe housing, meals and structured activities to meet the immediate needs of the women housed, followed by health care during and immediately after the birth of their child."

It's an answer that doesn't satisfy Valerie Andrews, who pressed for the Senate review and was herself a 17-year-old unwed mother at the Salvation Army's Toronto Grace Hospital, where she gave birth to a boy in 1970 and gave him up for adoption.  In her 2017 thesis, submitted to York University, Andrews says her research suggests some 300,000 unmarried Canadian women were systematically separated from their babies at birth between 1940 and 1970.  She said many were psychologically coerced. In a maternity home, talk about keeping your baby was not looked upon well, she said.  "It was the mature, respectable, responsible girl who chose adoption," Andrews said. "It was the 'other kind of girl' who wanted to keep her baby. The selfish girl, the foolish girl, the other kind of girl."

Andrews heard from mothers who never saw their children or were never told their gender.  "I mean, these babies were grabbed off delivery tables and whisked away, mothers seeing little mops of black hair being whisked away."

Some mothers in Canada's maternity homes were told their babies had died.   "That's why we fought for this Senate study," she said. "To bring out the illegal, unethical and human rights abuses that were perpetrated against unmarried mothers in the postwar period."

The standing Senate committee on social affairs, science and technology, which conducted the review and issued the report, is now chaired by Sen. Chantal Petitclerc.  CBC News tried to speak to her about the passing of the committee's deadline for an apology from Parliament and the fact none has been given. She declined to be interviewed.
47
Articles / 'We must stop blaming mothers in child protection social work?
« Last post by Forgotten Mother on November 29, 2023, 03:09:09 PM »
https://www.communitycare.co.uk/2023/11/24/we-must-stop-blaming-mothers-in-child-protection-social-work/

'We must stop blaming mothers in child protection social work?
A social work trainer says practitioners too often make mothers solely responsible for their children's safety, even when they are domestic abuse victims, undermining the effectiveness of interventions with families
November 24, 2023 in Children
by Vicki Shevlin

When I started in social work, I thought I would be prepared to manage the misogyny embedded in practice. But when it came to working with mothers who were victims of domestic abuse, I found myself developing habits that amounted to poor practice.  Without realising it, influenced by others on my team, I began focusing all my initial contact on mothers. I was arranging home visits based on when they were at home with their children, relying on them to share information and give consent, and, worst, holding them accountable for implementing the ?safety? in safety plans.  My practice began to emulate what is known as ?mother blaming?; a phrase commonly used in literature to describe the discourse of ?disproportionate responsibilisation of women for the protection of children and for their partners? abuse? (Wild, 2022).

What is ?mother blaming??

Mother blaming occurs when practitioners perpetuate the ideology that mothers are primarily responsible for the safety, wellbeing and care of children (Strega et al, 2008), even when they themselves are victims.  This may look like inviting mothers to meetings, but not following up when fathers do not attend. Sometimes, it may be the writing of safety plans that heavily rely on mothers to take certain actions to ?provide safety?, with fathers omitted completely such as a reliance on mothers to uphold recommended contact arrangements.  As a new social worker then, certain habits became embedded. I was writing sentences talking about ?mothers? capacity to protect? and not taking steps to look into what fathers were doing.  I look back on supervisions where I talked about ?hidden? or ?unseen? men but I now know that, without action, my use of the phrases simply reinforced the problem.  It wasn?t enough for me to recognise that a male perpetrator was missing from my intervention I needed to do something about it.  On one occasion, a mother told me she had felt I was blaming her, rather than supporting her. She didn?t trust that I would genuinely help her.

The impact of mother blaming

If social workers hold a narrow viewpoint that mothers are solely to blame for the behaviour and actions of perpetrators, it reduces the likelihood of them building strong and meaningful relationships with parents. This affects the effectiveness of interventions with children and families.  When blame is unfairly placed on mothers, it also disproportionately affects those who are part of the global majority, living in poverty or systematically marginalised.  There is also a risk of social workers causing harm through secondary victimisation, where victims suffer further harm because of the behaviour and attitudes of professionals.  As social workers, we have to question the ideologies that we are modelling to children and young people in the way we treat their family members.

?You can centre children and hold empathy for mothers?

The Children Act 1989 says the welfare and safety of children is paramount.  Many practitioners feel that they cannot prioritise the safety of children and at the same time acknowledge mothers as victims of domestic abuse. This is often attributed to legislation and policy focusing solely on children?s safety and the lack of services available to victims.  As a result, mothers are repeatedly held accountable for the actions of perpetrators.  It is important that, as social workers, we understand the limitations of binary thinking.  You can centre children and hold empathy for mothers. You can assess and support; care for families in a problematic system and stay conscious of the risks of mother blaming.  You don?t have to choose one or the other.

What needs to change

This starts with social work leaders who are committed to cultural change. Managers should be committed to changing habits, challenging language and, ultimately, encouraging their teams to think critically about systemic bias, particularly around domestic abuse.  Changing entrenched practice approaches is not simple. Many of us don?t want to admit that it is often easier to work with a parent who answers the phone, turns up to meetings or is more likely to be at home when we visit.  When effort is not put into trying to contact perpetrators, it is a choice, albeit one exacerbated by high caseloads, emotional stress and organisational pressure. Practitioners have to be supported in this.

Abandoning problematic language

Social workers are often required to be lead professionals in cases of domestic abuse. When you chair meetings, you should talk about the tendency of professionals to attribute blame to mothers whilst ignoring fathers. This can set the tone for further conversations, planning and interventions that take a systemic approach.  Local authorities can also make a commitment to stop using unhelpful terminology such as ?mother?s failure to protect? or ?father not engaging?. It?s problematic and perpetuates harmful tropes.  Social workers need to be supported to include alternative approaches in their assessments. This includes training specific to perpetrator behavior as well as mother and child relationships.  When you understand a child?s world and lived experience, you can gain insight into complex relationships that can be harmed when we make reductive assumptions.

References

Strega, S, Fleet, C, Brown, L, Dominelli, L, Callahan, M, Walmsley, C (2008) ?Connecting father absence and mother blame in child welfare policies and practice? Children and Youth Services Review 30(7)

Wild, J (2022) ?Gendered Discourses of Responsibility and Domestic Abuse Victim-Blame in the English Children?s Social Care System? Journal of Family Violence 38(3)
48
Politics / Speech by Sir Andrew McFarlane: Adapting Adoption to the Modern World
« Last post by RDsmum on November 16, 2023, 02:57:24 PM »
https://www.judiciary.uk/speech-by-sir-andrew-mcfarlane-adapting-adoption-to-the-modern-world/#:~:text=Secondly%2C%20to%20suggest%20that%20there,their%20birth%20family%20after%20adoption.

November 10, 2023

Speech by Sir Andrew McFarlane: Adapting Adoption to the Modern World

The Mayflower Lecture 2023

Adapting Adoption to the Modern World

Thursday 9 November 2023

It is a true honour to be giving this year?s Mayflower lecture. I am most grateful to the Plymouth Law Society for their kind invitation, and to the City of Plymouth and to the University of Plymouth who also co-hosts of tonight?s event.

The focus of my address is upon the adoption of children. In giving it, I am conscious that I am speaking to a number of audiences in addition to those of you who have been kind enough to gather this evening. Although many of you are lawyers, and what I say may be read by a good number of Family lawyers, I also hope that my words may be of interest to the wider public. With that in mind, I will take some time in setting out matters of history and context to assist ?new readers?, as it were, without, I hope, boring those for whom that information may be well known.

What follows is not a conventional ?law lecture?, and you will find only passing reference to case law within it. My purpose is twofold. Firstly, to raise public awareness of the fact that the Family Court is regularly making orders which will have a profound impact throughout their lives on those who are adopted and their families. Secondly, to suggest that there is a pressing need for courts and those who advise them in these matters to modernise the approach that is taken to supporting a young, adopted person by enhancing the degree to which they may maintain some form of relationship with their birth family after adoption.

It is the case that adoption, and the issue of contact on which I will focus, have been the subject of a number of recently published reports to which I will make appropriate reference in what follows.

The thought that the wider public may be interested in how the law and the courts currently approach issues of adoption is not an idle one. It is common place for the Press or media to carry stories of celebrities and others who were adopted long ago and who are now speaking out about their experience. Many of you will be familiar with TV programmes such as ?Long Lost Family?, in which researchers trace blood relatives, often decades after the event, and reunite brothers, sisters and other family members of individuals who were adopted in infancy. Not infrequently the adopted person will not even know if they have a brother or a sister until they are told of them, on camera, and shown a photograph. It is plainly ?good telly?, and the show has already run for 13 series. I suspect that, in part, it hooks the viewer because, on one level, it seems incredible that someone can live a long life, yet have no awareness of, let alone contact with, their mother or father or other close blood relatives.

In another, grimmer, context, there is clear public interest in the practices of the, now infamous, ?Magdalene Laundries? or ?Magdalene Asylums? active in Ireland from the 18th to the late 20th century. Although predominantly run by the Roman Catholic church, these institutions were operated by both protestant and catholic churches in both the north and south of Ireland. The laundries have recently been depicted in an award winning novel ? ?Small Things Like These? ? by Claire Keegan and a TV drama ?The Woman in the Wall?. In all it is thought that some 30,000 ?fallen women? were confined in Magdalene Laundries. Reasons for admission were broadly spread and were by no means confined to young women who had become pregnant out of wedlock. Once contained in a laundry, a woman might stay there for life. If she gave birth, her children went on to be adopted, as depicted in the book and film, ?Philomena?, by journalist Martin Sixsmith. It is a striking fact that it was only in 1996 that the last Magdalene Laundry closed.

In 2013, following the report of a government inquiry, the Taoiseach issued a formal apology for the hurt done to every woman who had spent time in a Magdalene Laundry.

My reason for taking time in a lecture about adoption in England and Wales, to tell you about these shocking, but historic, practices in a different country is that, whilst of a wholly different order to Ireland, the treatment of young women here who became pregnant out of wedlock in the middle of the 20th century is also deeply shameful.

In 2022, the Joint Committee of the Commons and Lords on Human Rights published a report on ?The Violation of Family Life: Adoption of Children of Unmarried Women 1949?1976? [JCHR]. It makes for grim reading. Its contents are important. It describes practices which provide a context in which it is possible to understand how the stories covered in Long Lost Family began.

The report covers the period from the Adoption Act 1949 to the Adoption Act 1976. Its summary describes how, during that period

??thousands of children of unmarried women were adopted even though their mothers did not want to let them go. Many of those affected, both mothers and children, have faced life-long suffering as a consequence of this separation.?

The inquiry sought to consider whether the treatment of these women and children respected their right to family life, as we understand it today, and how they were affected by the severing of that crucial bond between mother and child.

?The experiences of the mothers and their children are at the centre of this inquiry. They did not, as is often said, give their children away. Unmarried women who found themselves pregnant during this period faced secrecy and shame from the earliest stages. Those who would have seized the chance to keep their sons and daughters with them and brought them up themselves did not have the opportunity to do so. Societal and familial pressures, and the absence of support, contributed to thousands of children being taken from loving mothers and placed for adoption.?

The committee estimated that around 185,000 babies of unmarried mothers were adopted during this 27 year period ? that is nearly 7,000 per year. The report records:

?Many young women were sent away from home to conceal their pregnancy, and many spent their final weeks of pregnancy and weeks after the birth in mother and baby homes. Some of our witnesses recounted the abuse they faced whilst away from home. We were struck by descriptions of the ways in which the women were being ?punished? for what was seen as a transgression. There was an overwhelming feeling amongst the mothers we heard from that their treatment during and after giving birth was deliberate punishment for their pregnancy while unmarried.

We also heard about the continuing impact of the adoption of their baby on the mothers with many recounting ongoing mental health difficulties, others telling us the impacts on their family lives for decades. As one mother told us, ?53 years later and here I am, a wreck because of what happened to me and my daughter.? The mothers we heard from were subjected to cruelty because they were considered to have transgressed. Their treatment stands as an important reminder that human rights should be protected for all, including those who at any particular time are regarded as transgressors.?

The adoption orders that were made at that time, with respect to these women, were made ?by consent?, with the mothers signing away their rights, and the court simply acting upon the basis of that apparent consent in subsequently making an adoption order. The report describes the overwhelming culture amongst professionals, whether they be medical or social work practitioners, and voluntary adoption agencies, many of which were run by religious organisations, which was that there was no question of the mother caring for her child as a single parent and the only option was that of adoption. As a result, adoptions achieved in this way are, correctly, labelled as ?forced adoption?, rather than, as is often the case, ?relinquished children? ? a phrase which wrongly suggests that these mothers had some choice in the matter.

The report justifies reading in full. One aspect that it highlights is the difficulty that adopted adults encounter in accessing information about their birth family, despite now being entitled to do so.

To give one illustration of the finality of this form of adoption, in 1995 I had the privilege of representing a woman whose baby daughter had been adopted in 1960. All this lady wanted was simply to be told how things had turned out and if her daughter was well that this was so. She did not want to trace her or be put in touch. The application was refused and my appeal against the refusal was dismissed with the Court of Appeal holding that truly exceptional circumstances were required to justify disclosure of information in the official adoption registers. As far as I know, that mother may have gone to her grave not knowing anything about the life of the child she had given birth to. To my mind at the time, and at all times since, that outcome seemed cruel in the extreme to me. The same strict regime would not apply to modern adoptions, but that it was still applied to these forced adoptions only 25 years ago is striking.

For those who are interested, a recent ?File on Four? documentary by Jon Holmes describes his quest for information about the circumstances of his own adoption during that period. The programme shows that even for the adopted person, the task of tracing your own records is not made easy.

There is a group known as the ?UK Adult Adoptee Movement? , which believes that, despite the JCHR Report, there is still insufficient understanding of the impact of forced adoption on adoptees and their families. The group campaigns to raise awareness of the lifelong trauma adoptees face and to ensure appropriate support is available for all those involved. They state that:

?The impact of being adopted, does not magically disappear when you become an adult. Different life events, such as relationships, careers, healthcare and menopause are greatly affected by our adoption experiences ? yet this is completely ignored by society.?

Inquiries similar to those of the JCHR have been undertaken in Scotland and N Ireland into forced adoption. In Scotland and in Wales, the respective governments have issued a formal apology for the state?s knowledge of and involvement in this practice. The UK government has concluded that a formal apology with respect to England would not be appropriate.

The practice of ?forced adoption? ended in the 1970?s. My purpose in highlighting it today is to draw attention to the Joint Committee?s report, which did not receive wide media coverage on its publication last year. I believe, that, just as is the case with the Magdalene Laundries in Ireland, there is a legitimate public interest in knowing how the authorities in our jurisdiction approached the problem, as they saw it, of pregnancy out of wedlock in the middle of the last century. As a judge it is certainly not my place to comment on whether a public apology should, or should not, be made. There is, in any event, a legitimate debate to be had with respect to such apologies, and I do not intend to enter into it. I do, however, believe that many, if not all, in this room this evening will share my own sense of astonishment and shame that this practice was being undertaken in our country not so long ago, and that you may also share my profound sorrow for the women who were so clearly harmed by it.

My reason for referring to this, now historical, model of adoption is, in part to draw attention to what many will regard as a shocking practice, but also because, I believe, some elements of the culture surrounding it still remain in the modern approach to adoption, in particular with regard to the primary focus of this lecture, which is on the approach to what contact, if any, there should be between an adopted child and their birth family.

Until the 1970s adoption largely involved the relinquishing of young babies by a parent or parents with no expectation of any future contact. Children placed under this arrangement were usually very young and had no attachment or memory of their birth family. The stigma attached to illegitimacy and infertility meant that the decision not to promote contact was considered to be a protective factor for the adopter, the adopted child and the birth family. There was thus little call for post-adoption contact.

Against that background, and before turning to the modern law and practice, it is helpful to stand back and remind ourselves of what is meant by ?adoption? in English law.

An adoption order is an order giving parental responsibility for a child to the adopters. At the same time an adoption order operates to extinguish permanently the parental responsibility which any person had for the child immediately before the order was made . An adoption order is irrevocable (save in very restricted circumstances) and the child will be deemed in law to be the adopters? legitimate child, as if he or she had been born to them . The legal relationships within the child?s natural family cease to exist.

When a court or an adoption agency is coming to a decision relating to the adoption of a child, its paramount consideration must be the child?s welfare ?throughout his life? . This life-long lens is of a different order to that which applies in all other decisions a court may make concerning the upbringing of a child, where the paramount consideration is simply the child?s welfare. This distinction is important. It points up the essential difference between a decision focussed on ?the upbringing of a child? (to use the words of s 1 of the Children Act 1989) and one for adoption, which is a life-changing and permanent change of status. An adopted child is not only such during their minority, they are an adopted person throughout their adult life and forevermore.

Following the end of the days of ?forced adoption? or ?relinquished babies? reforming legislation in the 1970?s, adoption is now largely used for children who have been protected from child abuse by removing them from the care of their natural family. Such children are likely to require continued protection in the years to come, but, one may ask, how bad must the home circumstances be to justify not merely keeping the child safe during childhood, but legally removing her from her family forever and grafting her permanently into another family for the remainder of her life. The answer to that question, established by a decision of the UK Supreme Court , is that adoption will only be the proportionate remedy when it is necessary to meet the child?s welfare needs throughout their life and ?nothing else? (meaning no less intrusive arrangement) ?will do?.

The court must look at the realistic options for the child?s future care and must, in particular, consider the relationship that she has with any person and the impact of ceasing to be a member of the birth family and becoming an adopted person.

It is right to record that the change in the model of adoption from one which sought to remove many children born out of wedlock from their mothers, to one which aims to find permanent homes for abused children who cannot return to their family has had a radical impact on the volume of adoption applications which have fallen from a peak of around 25,000 in the 1960?s to below 5,000 children adopted from care in 2010 and again to around 2,950 in 2022.

An adoption order, or an order authorising a local authority to place a child for adoption, can only be made if each parent who has parental responsibility for the child either consents to the order, or the court has dispensed with the need to obtain their consent. Where consent is given, it must be unconditional and with full understanding of what is involved . Where a parent does not agree to the order, a court can only dispense with their consent where, either:
(a) The parent cannot be found or lacks capacity (within the meaning of the Mental Capacity Act 2005) to give consent; or
(b) The welfare of the child requires the consent to be dispensed with.

It is this latter requirement upon which, as I have already trailed, the Supreme Court focussed in Re B (A Child) in 2013. The judgments variously stressed that adoption should be seen ?as a last resort ? when all else fails? and where ?the court must be satisfied that there is no practical way of the authorities or others providing the requisite assistance and support? for the child and where ?nothing else will do?. The test is very strict with adoption only being ordered ?in exceptional circumstances? and where motivated by overriding requirements pertaining to the child?s welfare.

Finally, in this whistle-stop introduction to adoption law for newcomers, it is necessary to describe two other elements of the legal process. Firstly, in a change introduced by the Adoption and Children Act 2002 [?ACA 2002?], where a local authority intends to place a child who is in their care for adoption, they can only do so with the consent of both parents or where a court has made a ?placement for adoption? order. Such an order may, itself, only be made with consent, or where the court dispenses with parental consent on the basis that I have explained. Once a placement for adoption order has been made, the adoption issue is considered to be finalised so far as the parents are concerned and they can only apply to reopen the plan for the adoption for further court scrutiny if there has been a change in the circumstances underpinning the order and it is in the child?s interests to reopen the issue ? this is a high, and usually insurmountable, hurdle in most cases.

The importance of determining the issue of parental consent and for the court to endorse the plan for adoption before any adoptive placement takes place is that the child and the potential adopters will proceed into the placement knowing that, if it works out between them, an adoption is likely to follow without a further contested court hearing. Under the previous law, the parents were able to challenge the whole plan in a head-to-head trial with the adopters after the child had made his or her home with them and had settled down; that was, as you will imagine, often a most unsatisfactory and unsettling experience for the adopters. It was also less than fair to the parents who were facing a fait accompli, where it was hard to contemplate that a court would now remove their child from the adopters.

The second and final element of the legal structure that I need to paint in relates to ?contact?. As will become clear, it is this element that I consider needs to be developed in order to adapt adoption more suitably to the modern age.

Once a placement for adoption order has been made, all previous orders or arrangements for a child and his or her natural family to have contact with each other come to an end. When making a placement order, the court has the power to make a further order under ACA 2002, s 26 requiring the person with whom the child lives, or is to live, to allow him to visit or stay with the person named in the order, or for them otherwise to have contact with each other. Unless such an order has been made, there is no legal requirement for the local authority to arrange any contact with the child?s natural family.

Although s 26 speaks of a child being allowed to visit or stay with another person, such arrangements will be very rare given that the plan is for the child to cut all legal ties with his natural family. The normal arrangement, after a short interim period in which existing contact arrangements are run down and cease with a ?farewell? visit, is for a minimal link to be established via what is called ?letterbox contact?. The details will vary from case to case, but normally involve each side of the divide, namely the adopters and the natural parents, communicating with each other by a short letter or report once each year. These communications might, or might not, contain photographs and would give a brief update.

It is obviously important, as an adopted child grows up and comes to terms with who they are and what adoption means, for them to have some knowledge of their natural family. Adopters are taught and encouraged to maintain a ?Life Story Book? and undertake regular Life Story work with their child. In this context, the information gained through letterbox contact will be important and, minimal though the level of connection with the child might be, its value is not to be under-estimated.

The report in 2013 of a House of Lords Committee on Adoption Legislation quoted from two authoritative sources on the relevance and importance of contact post-adoption for the children who were now being adopted in saying that

?It was important to remember that contact should be for the benefit of the child, not for the parents or other relatives. The reasons why a child might benefit from contact were spelled out in evidence from After Adoption: ?it is not about maintenance of the relationships as they were with the birth family . . . what [children] like is to have some continuity that enables them to integrate the past with the present, and obviously then the future. I think contact can play a very useful role for the child in helping them understand their world and their life history.?
Helen Oakwater described the role that facilitated contact could play in assisting a child to ?integrate their past, allowing them to form a coherent narrative and more robust sense of self.??

Turning, at last, to the title of this address, ?Adapting Adoption for the Modern World?, what do I mean by the ?modern world? and why does adoption need adapting?

I suspect that I only need to begin to sketch out the ?modern world? point for you to understand the need for some form of rethink.

Picture the scene, the primary means by which an adoption might achieve the goal of creating an entirely new life for a child was hitherto to establish a largely imperviable wall around them, with little detailed knowledge of or contact with their natural family. Going back decades and decades, this is manifest in the extreme situations that are played out in ?Long Lost Families?, but still in relatively recent times a child, who might even live in a neighbouring town to his previous family, would be unlikely to know them or know much about them. In a world where communication was confined to letters and landline telephones, and a photograph was always a physical thing, it was possible, indeed easy, to maintain an adopted child in an hermetically sealed environment of this nature into adulthood unless the adopted person actively sought to trace their original family. Should they wish to do so, the process of giving them the identifying information was, for their own benefit, carefully controlled and supported by trained post-adoption counsellors.

You will now be ahead of me ?. With the explosion of digital communication in the past two decades it is possible for an adopted child, quietly, alone in their bedroom, without the knowledge of their adopted parents, to trace and find their family. The temptation to do so, and then to make contact with them, must be almost irresistible. But the dangers of doing so, and the potential for significant emotional harm to result, are easy to contemplate. Unlike the babies taken at birth of yesteryear, today?s adoptees have normally been removed from their family because they have experienced, or were likely to experience, significant harm there; harm of a nature and degree that justified permanent life-long placement as part of another family.

It is, sadly, now a not uncommon experience, despite the best efforts of adopters who have made a full, lifelong and loving commitment to their child, to experience the breakdown of that relationship during the teenage years with, in some cases, the young person moving with their feet and trying to rejoin their birth family. Such attempts often fail, or are a cause of further harm to the child. Fresh child protection procedures may be commenced between local authority social services with the adopters, as the child?s parents.

Even where events do not take such an extreme course, the task of bringing a young person up through the teenage years, never an easy one, must be all the more complicated where the child has been adopted and has had some experience, which may have been deeply traumatic, of their natural family. Gaining a sense of one?s own identity, where we come from, where we fit in and who we are, is a journey each of us will have undertaken during our adolescence. It was not easy was it, even if, like me, you had the security of a nuclear family that had been solidly consistent throughout your early years. Imagine how much more difficult it may be for one who has experienced a dysfunctional and abusive start in life, followed, probably, by a series of foster carers before becoming permanently part of your adoptive family only a few years before the onset of puberty.

That these difficulties exist is made evident by the fact that there is an active support group for adopters. It is called the ?Potato Group?, standing for ?Parents of Traumatised Adopted Teens Organisation? . Potato describes itself in these terms:

?We are a group of around 400 parents of adopted teenagers and post teens from all over the UK.

Collectively we parent young people who have suffered early, repeated trauma and continue to face difficulties in their teen and young adult years.

Our purpose is to provide a peer based service for families with teenagers who hurt and help them access support, information, resources and friendship from people who are living it and truly understand.?

This is a lecture about the law rather than social policy. It is in no manner the place of a judge to pontificate on the latter. That is so not only in constitutional terms, but also because, as a lawyer, I am not qualified to do so. These are matters, ultimately, for government and Parliament and it is welcome news that the Department for Education, which has responsibility for adoption, has commissioned a wide-ranging study about the lives of teenagers and young adults in adoptive, or alternatively ?special guardianship? families. A special guardianship order [under CA 1989, s 14A], which is intended to endure throughout childhood, is made to secure the placement of a child in the care of someone who is not their parent, but is often a close family member (for example a grandparent, aunt or uncle). Such placements, often referred to as ?kinship care?, have a sense of permanence, but allow the child to remain within the birth family.

In announcing the current project Sarah Jennings, Deputy Director at the Department for Education said
?This ground-breaking research will inform future government policy and delivery of both adoption and kinship care support. ? This research will inform our thinking on how to further improve the support provided to adoptive and kinship care families.?

The central question from my perspective is to ask whether the law, and the manner in which it is currently applied by the courts, continues to be fit for purpose, or whether it requires adapting to meet the changing needs of adopted children in the modern world.

To focus on the question, it is necessary to look in more detail at why contact is so important an issue. What follows is my own understanding after some 40 years, but that understanding has been greatly enhanced by recent discussion (for which I am most grateful) with Dr John Simmonds of Coram BAAF, with whom I am in agreement on many of these issues.

The first point to make is that the term ?contact? is itself unhelpful in this context. To lawyers, and no doubt to birth parents, it is likely to mean direct communication, and/or meetings, with the child. Such a narrow, or functional, view is unhelpful as it can obscure one of the core features of adoption, namely the severing of the child?s relationship with their birth parents and the establishment of a new set of relationships with the adopters. The consequences of the breaking and making of relationships is significant for all those involved including a profound sense of loss for the birth parents, a sense of confusion for the child/adolescent/adult and a source of anxiety for the adoptive parents. Any attempt to re-build these relationships in a meaningful and safe way through contact must take into account the needs of the individuals in a more comprehensive way than that provided by annual ?letterbox? messages.

To give an indication of the degree of sophistication required in developing a bespoke plan for contact for an individual adopted child, it is likely that the following factors will be relevant in most cases:

    Age of the child at removal from the parents.
    Age of the child at placement with approved adopters.
    The impact of genetic factors on the child?s development.
    The impact of risks to the child in the womb ? Foetal Alcohol Syndrome, or drug use by the mother.
    The lived experience of the child ? domestic abuse, poor feeding and hygiene, comfort, sensitivity, playfulness and relationships
    Tracking the child?s health ? weight, growth, sight, hearing.
    A range of health factors which impact on the child such as a named developmental condition.
    Parental neglect when evidenced by a significant failure to exercise parental responsibility as set out in law.
    Significant risk and harm that fall within the experience of abuse ? the direct actions of the parents that directly harm the child ? physical violence and assaults, sexual abuse.

All of these issues underpin the significance of avoiding any delay in agreeing the plan and solution for the child. We know that what every child needs throughout their life is a stable, loving family life that is or becomes their secure base. As a part of this, the child?s curiosity about their past including their birth family and other people who were important to them such as foster carers must be acknowledged and accommodated. The experience of feeling connected and having a personal narrative that is meaningful to the child/adolescent/adult is a core part of the recovery from an early life that was traumatic.

I am not alone in considering letter-box contact to be outdated and no longer apt to meet the more sophisticated understanding that now exists of a young adopted person?s needs. One particular deficit of letter-box communication is that it is typically only sent to the birth mother, and rarely to the father or, of great importance, to any siblings who may be separated from the adopted child. In addition, the model would seem to be based upon a fear of contact with the natural family destabilising the adoptive placement, when more modern thinking indicates that maintaining some continuing relationship with the natural family can assist the child.

Earlier, when looking at the historical context, I described the strong element of secrecy and lack of any contact which was a feature of forced adoption. Whilst that model has now been abandoned, it may be that its legacy continues to be played out in the approach to contact.

Drawing together these various strands, it is clear to me that a bespoke plan for future contact between a child and their birth family should be developed at an early stage and well before that child moves on to be placed for adoption.

In preparing this address, I have been greatly assisted by the fact that the report of a working group that I established some 18 months ago has recently been published and I intend, if I may, to spend some short time setting out its main conclusions before offering my own observations. The group, which is the President?s Public Law Working Group, Adoption Sub-Group (we are very inventive in the matter of group names), was made up of lawyers, judges, social work professionals and others who were all specialists in adoption work with Mrs Justice Frances Judd as its chair. Its report was published for consultation in September.

The report noted how adoption had adapted and changed down the years, but was clear that it needed to continue to do so saying:

?First and foremost, we recommend that there needs to be a greater focus on the issue of contact with the birth family as long as it is safe and for adopted adults to have more straightforward access to their records.?
Although the report ranges far and wide, for the purposes of this lecture I intend to take up its lead and focus in on contact after adoption. An opening paragraph summarises the group?s approach:

Whilst there has been a great deal of research in recent years as to the potential advantages to adopted children of maintaining some sort of face-to-face contact with the birth family, it remains unusual for the care plan for children who are going to be placed for adoption to propose more than indirect or letterbox contact. The House of Lords Children and Families Act 2014 Committee, which reported in December 2022 , concluded that the current system of letterbox contact was outdated and warned that the failure to modernise contact threatened to undermine the adoption system.

The group suggests a change in social work practice and training for all involved in the process (including prospective adopters) to give more focus to contact and the benefits that it can bring for many (although not all) adopted children.

The first chapter, on Adoption and Contact, opens with this statement:
Our main recommendation is that there should be a tailormade approach to the issue of contact for each adopted child which includes and promotes face-to-face contact with important individuals in that child?s life if it can be safely achieved. The issue of contact needs to be actively considered throughout the child?s minority, not only before the adoption order is made. The other recommendations are intended to support this overarching aim.
The PLWG report goes on to quote from the December 2022 House of Lords report:

?Contact, where safe, appropriate and properly managed, can be valuable for an adoptive child, their new family and their birth family, including siblings and other relatives. However, contact orders and support can vary, and the current system of letterbox contact is outdated. The failure to modernise contact threatens to undermine the adoption system.?

They reference a 2019 lecture that I gave to a Coram BAAF conference in which I said ?that any move towards greater openness and flexibility in post-adoption contact must come on a case-by-case basis, in a manner that brings prospective adopters along on a consensual basis. At each stage the court must give consideration to the issue of long-term contact, relying on advice from well-informed social workers and guardians as to the benefits (or otherwise) of contact in the particular case.?

The PLWG summarises the key messages from recent research:
i. There is considerable evidence that transparency and openness around the circumstances and experiences of the adoptee?s birth family is beneficial to an adopted child.
ii. The purpose of contact post-adoption is for the adoptee about enabling a process to help them understand their experiences and develop a sense of identity. Existing relationships with birth parents must change to take into account their different role as a result of the legal process of adoption.
iii. Separating siblings can lead to an enduring sense of loss.
iv. There are strong indications that face-to-face contact helps adoptees develop a sense of identity, accept the reasons why they were adopted and move forward with their lives.
v. However, ensuring that contact is safe for the child is pivotal to positive outcomes.
vi. Communication with and understanding from the parties involved in contact (birth parents or other relatives/adoptees/adopters) is an important component in its success.
vii. Despite the research indicating the benefits of face-to-face contact, where it can be safely managed, the overwhelming majority of cases continue to recommend only letterbox contact. Where direct contact does occur it often happens without any formal agreement being in place.
viii. Letterbox contact can prove problematic. A high number of arrangements stall as a result of one (or both) parties failing to maintain the arrangement. This leaves many adoptees without any effective contact from birth families.
ix. The experience in Northern Ireland tends to suggest that a shift in mindset by professionals involved in the process of adoption and strong guidance from the judiciary can bring about a change in approach to post adoption contact without the need for changes in primary legislation.
The group also recommends greater support and counselling for birth parents and that the full range of contact options, including digital options, should be actively considered by the professionals and the court during care and placement proceedings. They do not suggest that contact orders should routinely be made in the face of opposition from adoptive parents, whether at the time of the adoption itself or later, but it is believed that opposition is much less likely where adoptive parents are given a thorough understanding of the child?s needs right at the start and are given the right support.

A similar perspective is provided by another recent report. It is from the Consortium of Voluntary Adoption Agencies ?A home for me?? (November 2022) . It is a comparative review of different forms of permanence for children through adoption, SGO?s and fostering and it opens with the following sentence:
?The adoption system in the United Kingdom is not working well for children?

In the body of the CVAA report (p 13) the authors state that:
?? it should be recognised that birth family contact can be preserved and facilitated within adoption. Our research, and that of others, recognises that the awareness of birth family contact within adoption helps to facilitate it, and ongoing support for it within adoption ? needs to be improved. Realistically, in this age of social media, children are able to locate birth family and vice versa; therefore, earlier strategies of separating children from their birth family are no longer realistic. If this issue were to be addressed and there was recognition that adoption could support birth family contact, this could increase the likelihood of social workers recommending children and young people for adoption.?

Finally, before moving towards the recommendations made by the group, I wish to quote from oral evidence given to the Lords Children and Families Act 2014 Committee on 4 April 2022 by Al Coates who is a very experienced adoptive parent, former foster carer and a social worker as Mr Coates captures the essence of the thrust of each of these recent reviews and delivers it with the authority of one who has experienced the playing out of these issues first hand.

?We have a system that was developed in the 1950s, before computers were even invented. We are asking people to write letters. I do not know about you, but I do not write letters. We are asking vulnerable people and adult adoptive parents to write letters. We live in a social media age, and yet our feet are firmly stuck in the last century. We need a flexible, intuitive, risk averse but appropriately safe system that allows for meaningful support for lifelong contact with safe members of birth families.

I was recently given information from a freedom of information request across all RAAs in the UK. The amount of birth parents writing to adopters and not getting responses is amazing; it is in the hundreds. Once the adoption order is made, adopters do what they want.
The needs of five-year olds in relation to contact are very different from the needs of 10 year-olds. Then children become adolescents.

Twenty years ago, you would have had to go to the library and look through a microfiche?if you can remember what those are?to find someone. Now, if you give me three minutes with a mobile phone, I can find you. We need to have a flexible approach and to find an antidote to what are, as we have all been, angry teenagers acting impulsively. We find lots of families really struggling to support their children. We have a system that works on the worst-case scenario and presumes that all birth parents are dangerous and unsafe.

Do we need social workers who do an annual review and ask, ?What are your contact needs?? ? When children are young adults, physical contact might be appropriate, because we know that the physical risks to a three year-old are not present for a 15, 18 or 22 year-old. Those relationships cannot be restored. You cannot get time back. If we can keep a thread going through, let us do it with ongoing reviews.?

It is now time to draw this address to a close. After such a long run up, you are entitled to anticipate a number of punchy ?conclusions? and guidance for future practice. Timing is not, however, favourable in that regard. The recommendations of the PLWG Adoption group are currently out for consultation until 30th November. After that date, and taking account of the consultation responses, the group will submit its final report and it will then be for me, as President, to consider the detail and indicate whether or not any final recommendations are accepted and are to be followed.

I therefore need to hold back and do no more than I have done by describing the current landscape around the issue of contact and by, now, summarising the PLWG group?s key recommendations, together with some comments of my own.

Currently, in many cases, when the court makes a placement for adoption order consideration of contact may be confined to the immediate cessation of the current arrangements, with little or no thought being given to the medium and long-term support that can be given to the child prior to, during and after placement for adoption. My own view is that there is a need for a radical departure from that model. It should be the responsibility of the court, at this key stage when it has determined that a child is to be adopted, but before the adoptive placement has been identified, to establish the basis and structure for any continuing relationship with the birth family. This may require looking beyond the birth parents to other members of the child?s wider family to see if there is someone, for example an aunt or a cousin, with whom the child may have an intermittent, safe, but real, relationship down the years. The ?Lifelong Links? model, operated by the Family Rights Group, for contact to children in long-term care may provide an example of how such a link might be established and maintained for an adopted child.

It is that approach which lies behind a key recommendation of the PLWG group which is that the full range of contact options (including digital options) should be actively considered by professionals and the court during care and placement proceedings rather than being dealt with by an assumption that contact will be via letterbox only.

The group goes on to recommend that courts should consider how they can use the jurisdiction to make contact orders under s 26 of ACA 2002 to set out clearly the assessed needs of the child to stay in touch with relevant members of their birth beyond the point of the placement order (where prospective adopters may or may not yet be identified), particularly in cases where it would be detrimental for the child to have contact cut off at this stage. Any such orders end when the adoption order is made, but they may set the tone for what the court determines should happen after the adoption order.

It may be said that, for the court to act in this way, might hinder the task of finding prospective adopters, who may be deterred by the idea of the child having some continuing contact with the birth family in the future, or that it may compromise the autonomy normally afforded to adopters. I do not agree that this should be an inhibiting factor in the court making an order where that is justified. The court?s focus is solely on the best interests of the child, not on those of potential future adopters. Where, for the reasons that I have attempted to set out in this lecture, the court considers that there should be continuing contact up to and after adoption it should establish this by a court order at the time of making a placement order. The contact regime will be reviewed at any subsequent adoption hearing at which the adopters can be heard.

At that later stage, the group recommends that courts should consider, in the right case, the use of section 51A ACA 2002 which contemplates the making of a contact order now or at any time after the making of an adoption order. In some cases, that provision may be used to facilitate a review of contact by the court at a suitable time after the making of the adoption order, for example where direct contact is not appropriate at the time of the order but may be indicated at a time in the foreseeable future.

The group recognise that imposing an order on unwilling adopters is a very serious matter, but they consider that, if the other recommendations in their report are accepted, there is hope that, with greater support and training for all concerned, decisions about contact are overwhelmingly likely to be made by consent. In this regard, they also recommend that consideration should be given in every case to a meeting between the adopters and members of the birth family.

Finally, in this selection of highlights, the group recommend that after the adoption order is made, periodic reviews of contact plans should be offered by the adoption social worker to ensure the plan is still meeting the child?s needs and to consider any changes to the contact or support for contact that might be needed. Such a change would indeed be a radical departure from current practice, but, with the words of Mr Al Coates fresh in your minds, you will not be surprised to hear me say that, subject to the consultation process, I consider that this suggestion is well founded.

I would conclude by stressing that adoption is a life changing and life enhancing process. Making an adoption order is one of the most significant decisions and actions the State can take. The plan for any adopted child is to ensure that they become settled on a pathway similar to any child whose life is centred around their birth parents and family, with provision for day to day care, a secure base, stimulation, connection and identity. In addition, an adopted child has needs beyond the ?typical child and family experience? that are stimulated by curiosity and the need to know about family history, relationships, and their past circumstances. The term ?open? is often used to give recognition to these issues in modern adoption ? the modern approach is fundamentally different to the evidence and conclusions explored by the Joint Parliamentary Committee in pre-1970?s adoption, where secrecy, denial and condemnation were prevalent. What we now know is that the concept of modern adoption needs to be developed further, so that services are improved, in particular with regard to provision for a continuing relationship with and knowledge of the birth family, with the child?s needs being at the centre of all that we do. Every adopted child has a right to no less.
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https://www.thereporteronline.com/2023/11/06/inspired-by-online-dating-ai-tool-for-adoption-matchmaking-falls-short-for-vulnerable-foster-kids/

Inspired by online dating, AI tool for adoption matchmaking falls short for vulnerable foster kids

By SALLY HO and GARANCE BURKE (Associated Press)

Some are orphans, others seized from their parents. Many are older and have overwhelming needs or disabilities. Most bear the scars of trauma from being hauled between foster homes, torn from siblings or sexually and physically abused.  Child protective services agencies have wrestled for decades with how to find lasting homes for such vulnerable children and teens a challenge so enormous that social workers can never guarantee a perfect fit.  Into this morass stepped Thea Ramirez with what she touted as a technological solution an artificial intelligence-powered tool that ultimately can predict which adoptive families will stay together. Ramirez claimed this algorithm, designed by former researchers at an online dating service, could boost successful adoptions across the U.S. and promote efficiency at cash-strapped child welfare agencies.  ?We?re using science not merely preferences ? to establish a score capable of predicting long-term success,? Ramirez said in an April 2021 YouTube video about her ambitions to flip ?the script on the way America matches children and families? using the Family-Match algorithm.

An Associated Press investigation, however, found that the AI tool among the few adoption algorithms on the market has produced limited results in the states where it has been used, according to Family-Match?s self-reported data that AP obtained through public records requests from state and local agencies.  Ramirez also has overstated the capabilities of the proprietary algorithm to government officials as she has sought to expand its reach, even as social workers told AP that the tool wasn?t useful and often led them to unwilling families.  Virginia and Georgia dropped the algorithm after trial runs, noting its inability to produce adoptions, though both states have resumed business with Ramirez?s nonprofit called Adoption-Share, according to AP?s review of hundreds of pages of documents.  Tennessee scrapped the program before rolling it out, saying it didn?t work with their internal system even after state officials spent more than two years trying to set it up, and social workers reported mixed experiences with Family-Match in Florida, where its use has been expanding.  State officials told AP that the organization that Ramirez runs as CEO owns some of the sensitive data Family-Match collects. They also noted that the nonprofit provided little transparency about how the algorithm works.  Those experiences, the AP found, provide lessons for social service agencies seeking to deploy predictive analytics without a full grasp of the technologies? limitations, especially when trying to address such enduring human challenges as finding homes for children described by judges as the ?least adoptable.?  ?There?s never going to be a foolproof way for us to be able to predict human behavior,? said Bonni Goodwin, a University of Oklahoma child welfare data expert. ?There?s nothing more unpredictable than adolescence.?

Ramirez, of Brunswick, Georgia, where her nonprofit is also based, refused to provide details about the algorithm?s inner workings and declined interview requests. By email, she said the tool was a starting point for social workers and did not determine whether a child would be adopted. She also disputed child welfare leaders? accounts of Family-Match?s performance.  ?User satisfaction surveys and check-ins with our agency end users indicate that Family-Match is a valuable tool and helpful to users actively using it to support their recruitment + matching efforts,? Ramirez wrote.

Ramirez, a former social worker and wife of a Georgia pastor, has long sought to promote adoption as a way to reduce abortions, according to her public statements, newsletters and a blog post.  More than a decade ago, she launched a website to connect pregnant women with potential adoptive parents. She marketed it as ?the ONLY online community exclusively for networking crisis pregnancy centers? and pledged to donate 10% of membership fees to such anti-abortion counseling centers, whose aim is to persuade women to bring their pregnancies to term.  Ramirez said in an email that Family-Match is not associated with such centers.  She next turned her focus to helping children living in foster care who don?t have family members to raise them. Most of the 50,000 children adopted nationwide in 2021 landed with relatives, federal statistics show, while about 5,000 ended up with people they didn?t previously know. Such recruitment-based adoptions are the most difficult to carry out, social workers say.  Ramirez has said she called Gian Gonzaga, a research scientist who had managed the algorithms at eharmony, a dating site with Christian roots that promises users ?real love? for those seeking marriage. She asked Gonzaga if he would team up with her to create an adoption matchmaking tool.  Gonzaga, who worked with his wife Heather Setrakian at eharmony and then on the Family-Match algorithm, referred questions to Ramirez. Setrakian said she was very proud of her years of work developing the Family-Match model.  An eharmony spokesperson, Kristen Berry, said the dating site was ?not affiliated with Family-Match.? Berry described Gonzaga and Setrakian as ?simply former employees.?

Later, Ramirez began crisscrossing the country promoting Family-Match to state officials. Her work and her religious convictions drew support primarily from conservatives, including first lady Melania Trump, who spotlighted Ramirez?s efforts at a foster care event in the White House Situation Room. Ramirez has co-written reports and given a high-profile presentation at the American Enterprise Institute, benefitted from attention-getting fundraisers and used connections to win over state officials to pilot her tool.  Social workers say Family-Match works like this: Adults seeking to adopt submit survey responses via the algorithm?s online platform, and foster parents or social workers input each child?s information.  After the algorithm generates a score measuring the ?relational fit,? Family-Match displays a list of the top prospective parents for each child. Social workers then vet the candidates.  In a best-case scenario, a child is matched and placed in a home for a trial stay; parents then submit the legal paperwork to formalize the adoption.  Family-Match first started matching families in Florida and Virginia in 2018. Virginia?s then-governor Terry McAuliffe, a Democrat, ordered a pilot at the urging of a campaign donor he appointed as the state?s ?adoption champion.? In Florida, which has a privatized child welfare system, regional care organizations soon signed up for the algorithm for free thanks to a grant from a foundation founded by the then-CEO of the company that makes Patr?n tequila and his wife.  Once philanthropic dollars dried up in Florida, the state government picked up the tab, awarding Adoption-Share a $350,000 contract last month for its services.  Pilot efforts in Tennessee and Georgia followed.  Adoption-Share has generated $4.2 million in revenue since 2016; it reported about $1.2 million in 2022, according to its tax returns.  In Virginia?s two-year test of Family-Match, the algorithm produced only one known adoption, officials said.  ?The local staff reported that they did not find the tool particularly useful,? the Virginia Department of Social Services said in a statement, noting that Family-Match ?had not proven effective? in the state.

Virginia social workers were also perplexed that the algorithm seemed to match all the children with the same group of parents, said Traci Jones, an assistant director at the state?s social services agency.  ?We did not have access to the algorithm even after it was requested,? Jones said.

By 2022, Virginia had awarded Adoption-Share an even larger contract for a different foster care initiative that the nonprofit says ?leverages? the Family-Match application.  Georgia officials said they ended their initial pilot in October 2022 because the tool didn?t work as intended, ultimately only leading to two adoptions during their year-long experiment.  Social workers said the tool?s matching recommendations often led them to unwilling parents, leading them to question whether the algorithm was properly assessing the adults? capacity to adopt those kids.  Ramirez met with the governor?s office and also lobbied a statehouse committee for a direct appropriation, saying the tool was ?an incredible feat.? By July, the Georgia Department of Human Services signed a new agreement with Adoption-Share to use Family-Match again this time for free, said Kylie Winton, an agency spokesperson.  Florida?s privatized child welfare system operates with more than a dozen regional agencies providing foster care and adoption services. When AP requested public records about their Family-Match cases, many of those agencies gave the tool mixed reviews and couldn?t explain Family-Match?s self-reported data, making it difficult to assess the algorithm?s purported success rate.  Statewide in Florida, Family-Match claimed credit for 603 placements that resulted in 431 adoptions over a five-year period, according to Adoption-Share?s third-quarter report for the 2023 fiscal year that AP obtained from a Pensacola-based child welfare organization.  Scott Stevens, an attorney representing the FamiliesFirst Network, told AP in June that only three trial placements recommended by Family-Match failed since the agency started using the algorithm in 2019. But Adoption-Share?s records that Stevens provided to the AP indicate that his agency made 76 other Family-Match placements that didn?t show the children had been formally adopted. Asked by AP for clarification, Stevens couldn?t say what happened in those 76 cases and referred further questions to Family-Match.  Ramirez declined to discuss the discrepancy but acknowledged in an email that not all matches work out.  ?Transitions can take time in the journey to adoption,? Ramirez said in an email, adding that the ?decision to finalize the adoption is ultimately the responsibility? of agencies with input from the children and judges. On Sunday, Adoption-Share posted on its Facebook page that the organization had ?reached 500 adoptions in Florida!?

Jenn Petion, the president and CEO of the organization that handles adoptions in Jacksonville, said she likes how the algorithm lets her team tap into a statewide pool of potential parents. Petion has also endorsed Family-Match for helping her find her adoptive daughter, whom she described as a ?100% match? in an Adoption-Share annual report.  Family-Match assists social workers in making ?better decisions, better matches,? Petion said, but her agency, Family Support Services declined to provide statistics about Family-Match.  The Fort Myers-based Children?s Network of Southwest Florida said in the past five years the Family-Match tool has led to 22 matches and eight adoptions, as compared to the hundreds of matches and hundreds of adoptions that its social workers did without the tool.  Bree Bofill, adoption program manager for Miami-based Citrus Family Care Network, said social workers found the tool didn?t work very well, often suggesting potential families that weren?t the right fit.  ?It?s frustrating that it?s saying that the kids are matched but in reality, when you get down to it, the families aren?t interested in them,? Bofill said of the algorithm.

Bofill also said it was difficult to assess the tool?s utility because social workers who found potential parents were sometimes asked by Family-Match officials to tell the adults to register with the tool even if it played no role in the adoption, allowing the algorithm to claim credit for the match.  Winton, the Georgia agency spokesperson, told AP about a similar issue Family-Match could claim credit for pairings if the child and parent already were in its system, even if the program didn?t generate the match. Family-Match, in an April 2023 ?confidential? user guide posted on the internet, instructed social workers not to delete cases that were matched outside the tool. Instead, they were told to document the match in the system so that Adoption-Share could refine its algorithm and follow up with the families.  Ramirez didn?t address Bofill?s claim but said in an email that Family-Match?s reports reflect what social workers input into the system.  Officials in Virginia, Georgia and Florida said they weren?t sure how the tool scored families based on the highly sensitive variables powering the algorithm.  In Georgia, Family-Match continues to gather data about whether foster youth have been sexually abused, the gender of their abuser, and whether they have a criminal record or ?identify as LGBTQIA.? That kind of information is typically restricted to tightly secured child protective services case files.  In Tennessee, a version of the algorithm?s questionnaire for prospective parents asked for their specific household income and for them to rate how ?conventional? or ?uncreative? they were. They were also asked if they agreed or disagreed with a statement about whether they seek God?s help, according to records AP obtained.  When Tennessee Department of Children?s Services reviewed the proposed Family-Match assessment, they questioned some of the information Family-Match wanted to collect. Tennessee officials asked why Family-Match needed certain sensitive data points and how that data influenced the match score, according to an internal document in which state workers noted questions and feedback about the algorithm. Ramirez said the agency didn?t challenge the survey?s validity, and said the discussions were part of the streamlining process.  Virginia officials said once families? data was entered into the tool, ?Adoption Share owned the data.?

In Florida, two agencies acknowledged that they used Family-Match informally without a contract, but would not say how children?s data was secured.  Ramirez wouldn?t say if Family-Match has deleted pilot data from its servers, but said her organization maintains a compliance audit and abides by contract terms.  Social welfare advocates and data security experts have been raising alarms about government agencies? increasing reliance on predictive analytics to assist them on the job. Those researchers and advocates say such tools can exacerbate racial disparities and discriminate against families based on characteristics they cannot change.  Adoption-Share is part of a small cadre of organizations that say their algorithms can help social workers place children with foster or adoptive families.  ?We?re using, essentially, kids as guinea pigs for these tools. They are the crash test dummies,? said Suresh Venkatasubramanian, a former assistant director of the Biden White House?s Office of Science and Technology Policy now at Brown University. ?That?s a big problem right there.?

Adoption-Share continues to try to expand, seeking business in places like New York City, Delaware and Missouri, where child welfare agency officials were reviewing its pitch. Ramirez said she also saw an opportunity last year to present Family-Match to the U.S. Health and Human Services Department ?to demonstrate our tool and how it can be a helpful resource.?

This year, Adoption-Share landed a deal with the Florida Department of Health for Family-Match to build an algorithm intended ?to increase the pool of families willing to foster and/or adopt medically complex children,? according to state contracts.

Health department officials didn?t respond to repeated requests for comment.  Connie Going, a longtime Florida social worker whose own viral adoption story Ramirez has described as her inspiration for Family-Match, said she didn?t believe the tool would help such vulnerable children. Going said the algorithm gives false hope to waiting parents by failing to deliver successful matches, and ultimately makes her job harder.  ?We?ve put our trust in something that is not 100% useful,? Going said. ?It?s wasted time for social workers and wasted emotional experiences for children.?
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Articles / Ireland's mother and baby homes explored in powerful new documentary
« Last post by RDsmum on November 03, 2023, 03:25:18 PM »
https://www.irishcentral.com/roots/history/stolen-documentary-mother-baby-homes?utm_campaign=IC%20Daily%20-%203%20Nov%20-%202023-11-03&utm_medium=Email&_hsmi=281072162&_hsenc=p2ANqtz-_ZybIzAgaUWo1F2ORazZqbxszUU9hA1manSvCLrTdvG3sPnh4gEdzzvFo4_Bll9OE2LiHZtIHGB1iznVJhVZL3JXFWsNwqlRau-Y_csYW7wJJakiI&utm_content=Story1&utm_source=HubSpot

Ireland's mother and baby homes explored in powerful new documentary
"Stolen" explores how over 80,000 unmarried mothers were incarcerated in religious institutions where children were often adopted within Ireland and abroad.
IrishCentral Staff
@IrishCentral
Nov 03, 2023

Margo Harkin's "Stolen" explores how over 80,000 unmarried mothers were incarcerated in religious institutions run by nuns, shining a light on a period of Irish history when children were often adopted within Ireland and abroad unaware of their birth story or the identity of their birth mother.  Other children were fostered out as cheap labor after they turned six, while over 9,000 babies and young children died in the institutions between 1922 and 1998 at a rate that was five times the national average.  The new two-hour documentary allows survivors to give their own accounts of life in the institutions, detailing their experiences of cruelty and loss. It also explores survivors' ongoing campaign for the truth, including a demand for DNA testing of remains to allow families to identify their loved ones and find closure.  Others, in the absence of burial records, are seeking to find the location of their relatives' final resting place, while some survivors still hold out hope of finding a long-lost sibling, with the film investigating allegations that some children's deaths were fabricated to facilitate their adoption to the United States.   "Stolen" will additionally explore how the history of religious institutions was largely ignored until historian Catherine Corless uncovered that there were 796 babies and young children buried in an underground sewage plant at the Bon Secours Mother and Baby Home in Tuam, County Galway.  The documentary will also examine the Mother and Baby Homes Commission of Investigation, which was established by the Irish Government following the discovery in Tuam and other mother and baby homes around the country.  The Commission published its report in 2021, confirming reports of infant mortality, poor hygiene, and misogyny. Then-Taoiseach Miche?l Martin issued a State apology following the publication of the report.  However, the film explores how survivors are not satisfied with how the report found that there was no evidence that women were forced into the institutions, with the report additionally stating that there was no evidence of forced adoptions.  The report also proposed a payment scheme for survivors but excluded anyone who spent less than six months in an institution.  Colleen Anderson, who was born in the Sean Ross Abbey mother and baby home and features in the documentary, said the report could have shown more empathy to survivors.  "Whether it?s six months or nearly three years like me, the outcome of these adoptions were not often happy," Anderson told the Irish Independent.

"To be robbed of a part of your life ? it touches everybody. There could have been more empathy and sympathy from the government. To this day, we?re being ignored or put on the back burner."
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