Welcome to the 10th Biennial Adoption Initiative Conference
The Evolution of Adoption Practice: Activist and Community Perspectives
Password for the Vimeo Videos: AIC2022PAID
AM Friday Session A Pt.1 Susan Devan Harness https://vimeo.com/708185567
AM Friday Session A Pt. 2 Michele Kriegman https://vimeo.com/710420474
The Structure of Non-Belonging in American Indian Transracial Adoption
Transracial adoption has typically been studied and talked about within the realms of psychology and social work, which places much of the onus of non-belonging either on the individual or on the family unit.
In using the lens of cultural anthropology, the issue of non-belonging for transracial adoptees in the U.S. has deeper roots that extend far into American culture and history. Susan Devan Harness explores how American Indian transracial adoptees experience non-belonging through intricate boundaries: White and American Indian.
She helps us understand what is at stake for the American Indian transracial adoptee: loss of cultural identity, the loss of kinship groups who hold such significance in Native culture, loss of pride in our identity and heritage from our branding as "enemies of the state" as taught in schools and pervasive in pop culture.
She asks why it's important to care? Because powerful forces are attempting, through legal channels to abolish the Indian Child Welfare Act of 1978. It has nothing to do with the protection of American Indian children, and everything to do with the one thing American Indians and the U.S. government have always fought over: the land.
Links shared during the chat
https://www.nicwa.org/wp-content/upl ...
Adoption Initiative Conference 2020/2022 adoptioninitiative@gmail.comWelcome to the 10th Biennial Adoption Initiative Conference
The Evolution of Adoption Practice: Activist and Community Perspectives
Password for the Vimeo Videos: AIC2022PAID
AM Friday Session A Pt.1 Susan Devan Harness https://vimeo.com/708185567
AM Friday Session A Pt. 2 Michele Kriegman https://vimeo.com/710420474
The Structure of Non-Belonging in American Indian Transracial Adoption
Transracial adoption has typically been studied and talked about within the realms of psychology and social work, which places much of the onus of non-belonging either on the individual or on the family unit.
In using the lens of cultural anthropology, the issue of non-belonging for transracial adoptees in the U.S. has deeper roots that extend far into American culture and history. Susan Devan Harness explores how American Indian transracial adoptees experience non-belonging through intricate boundaries: White and American Indian.
She helps us understand what is at stake for the American Indian transracial adoptee: loss of cultural identity, the loss of kinship groups who hold such significance in Native culture, loss of pride in our identity and heritage from our branding as "enemies of the state" as taught in schools and pervasive in pop culture.
She asks why it's important to care? Because powerful forces are attempting, through legal channels to abolish the Indian Child Welfare Act of 1978. It has nothing to do with the protection of American Indian children, and everything to do with the one thing American Indians and the U.S. government have always fought over: the land.
Links shared during the chat
https://www.nicwa.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/04/Setting-the-Record-Straight-ICWA-Fact-Sheet.pdf
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Education_for_Extinction
The Unfinished Business of Adoptees Who Are Native American / First Peoples: Legal, Cultural, and Identity Issues to Navigate & Reclaim
Concepts covered:
History of Indian Adoption Projects run by the federal government to promote adoption to white families; Indian boarding schools in Canada & USA.
Avenues back to one's tribe: Examples of Adoptee "Re-Culturation"
- Pow-wows for adopted American Indians and First Peoples,
- Adopt-an-elder, and online networks;
- Truth & Reconciliation Commissions (Wabanaki example)
- NMAI and other resources Decision points and impacts:
- Indian Child Welfare Act (ICWA) vs. state laws and/or social work policy;
- Cherokee rolls and race; and
- Conflicting definitions of belonging/right of return
Case study: "Tribal rights" through birth-parents and "anonymous donors"
Personal story: How four adoptees, my stepsons and I, braided together a meaningful Iroquois narrative, accepting some losses are for keeps.
Conclusion: What's at stake and ways you can support ICWA
Links shared during the presentation:
"Fearless" Mohawk Ironworkers, Walking High Steel, NPR: https://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=3048030
Haaland v Brackeen:
https://www.supremecourt.gov/docket/docketfiles/html/public/21-376.html
Reunion Land Bookshelves: Adoptees, DCPs & Fostereds
www.bookshop.org/shop/reunionlandpress
The Birth-Fathers' Club Series:
https://bookshop.org/lists/featured-in-2022-the-birth-fathers-club-series
Amazon.com https://www.amazon.com/author/michele
• Rock Memoir • From a Desert City by the Sea • Finding Faith
Give back and protect ICWA Donate to the Supreme Court Project of the Native American Legal Fund https://secure.narf.org/page/64457/donate/1
Donate to the National Indian Child Welfare Association
https://www.nicwa.org/donate-online/
Links shared during the presentation: