A study of adoption disruptions in Manitoba, 1990-1996

Research indicates that older and/or special needs children are at increased risk for adoption disruption. This study examined the adoption placements of ten permanent wards of Winnipeg Child and Family Services in order to gain a better understanding of some of the issues involved in disruption. Se...

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Main Author: Mendell, Sandra C.
Language:en_US
Published: 2007
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1993/1433
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spelling ndltd-MANITOBA-oai-mspace.lib.umanitoba.ca-1993-14332014-01-31T03:30:41Z A study of adoption disruptions in Manitoba, 1990-1996 Mendell, Sandra C. Research indicates that older and/or special needs children are at increased risk for adoption disruption. This study examined the adoption placements of ten permanent wards of Winnipeg Child and Family Services in order to gain a better understanding of some of the issues involved in disruption. Seven social workers who had been involved in adoption disruption situations were interviewed. A qualitative research approach was used to both gather and evaluate the data for this study. The characteristics of children, adoptive parents and organizations involved in adoption disruptions were examined. The findings from this research were compared with the themes in the literature on adoption disruption. The relationship between the adoptive parents and the adopted child had a significant role in the outcome of the adoption placement. Among important variables were the child's placement history and age at the time of adoption placement, the family loss of hope, the role of the adoptive mother and the impact of thedisruption on the social workers involved in the situation. Implications for social work practice were also discussed. 2007-05-17T12:36:20Z 2007-05-17T12:36:20Z 1998-04-01T00:00:00Z http://hdl.handle.net/1993/1433 en_US
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language en_US
sources NDLTD
description Research indicates that older and/or special needs children are at increased risk for adoption disruption. This study examined the adoption placements of ten permanent wards of Winnipeg Child and Family Services in order to gain a better understanding of some of the issues involved in disruption. Seven social workers who had been involved in adoption disruption situations were interviewed. A qualitative research approach was used to both gather and evaluate the data for this study. The characteristics of children, adoptive parents and organizations involved in adoption disruptions were examined. The findings from this research were compared with the themes in the literature on adoption disruption. The relationship between the adoptive parents and the adopted child had a significant role in the outcome of the adoption placement. Among important variables were the child's placement history and age at the time of adoption placement, the family loss of hope, the role of the adoptive mother and the impact of thedisruption on the social workers involved in the situation. Implications for social work practice were also discussed.
author Mendell, Sandra C.
spellingShingle Mendell, Sandra C.
A study of adoption disruptions in Manitoba, 1990-1996
author_facet Mendell, Sandra C.
author_sort Mendell, Sandra C.
title A study of adoption disruptions in Manitoba, 1990-1996
title_short A study of adoption disruptions in Manitoba, 1990-1996
title_full A study of adoption disruptions in Manitoba, 1990-1996
title_fullStr A study of adoption disruptions in Manitoba, 1990-1996
title_full_unstemmed A study of adoption disruptions in Manitoba, 1990-1996
title_sort study of adoption disruptions in manitoba, 1990-1996
publishDate 2007
url http://hdl.handle.net/1993/1433
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