Mar 26, 2022 03:15 PM - 04:45 PM(America/New_York)
20220326T1515 20220326T1645 America/New_York Saturday Afternoon, Session C

Welcome to the 10th Biennial Adoption Initiative Conference

The Evolution of Adoption Practice: Activist and Community Perspectives

Password for the Vimeo Videos: AIC2022PAID

PM Saturday Session B Pt. 1 Johanne Thomson-Sweeny https://vimeo.com/719972962

PM Saturday Session B Pt. 2 Susan Branco, Saana Stella, & Amelia https://vimeo.com/719972962

What Help Do International Adoptees Need When Experiencing Post-Adoption Contact Through Social Media

Introduction: It is becoming more and more common to hear that an international adoptee has found their birth family through social media. Social media, such as Facebook, has changed how adoptees experience their search and reunion. With these online communication tools, adoptees and their birth families can find and contact each other faster than by going through more official channels, like the government. However, this type of search and reunion can be unsettling in different ways. 

Aims: The aim of the research on which this proposal is based was to better understand how internationally adopted adults experience social media contact with their birth families.

Method: Eight Quebec international adoptees aged 18 and older participated in individual interviews. The study was conducted by using an interpretative phenomenological analysis approach. Thematic analysis was used to analyze the adoptees' discourses.

Results: The adoptees' discourses mention how support from their adoptive family and their social network, such as emotional and financial support, and from adoption competent professionals helped them face the different challenges brought on by social media contact. Access to different resources, like transl ...

Adoption Initiative Conference 2020/2022 adoptioninitiative@gmail.com
19 attendees saved this session

Welcome to the 10th Biennial Adoption Initiative Conference

The Evolution of Adoption Practice: Activist and Community Perspectives

Password for the Vimeo Videos: AIC2022PAID

PM Saturday Session B Pt. 1 Johanne Thomson-Sweeny https://vimeo.com/719972962

PM Saturday Session B Pt. 2 Susan Branco, Saana Stella, & Amelia https://vimeo.com/719972962

What Help Do International Adoptees Need When Experiencing Post-Adoption Contact Through Social Media

Introduction: It is becoming more and more common to hear that an international adoptee has found their birth family through social media. Social media, such as Facebook, has changed how adoptees experience their search and reunion. With these online communication tools, adoptees and their birth families can find and contact each other faster than by going through more official channels, like the government. However, this type of search and reunion can be unsettling in different ways. 

Aims: The aim of the research on which this proposal is based was to better understand how internationally adopted adults experience social media contact with their birth families.

Method: Eight Quebec international adoptees aged 18 and older participated in individual interviews. The study was conducted by using an interpretative phenomenological analysis approach. Thematic analysis was used to analyze the adoptees' discourses.

Results: The adoptees' discourses mention how support from their adoptive family and their social network, such as emotional and financial support, and from adoption competent professionals helped them face the different challenges brought on by social media contact. Access to different resources, like translation applications, also enabled their ability to manage the situation and its more negative facets.

Discussion: Different types of support and resources play an important role in the outcome of the social media contact between adoptees and their birth families. When participants have access to help and resources, they can better navigate this reality that can be disturbing. 

Implications: Adoptees who conduct their search and reunion through social media usually do not have professional help and must navigate the outcomes alone. This study indicates different ways in which adoptees can better make sense of their experience and the help their family, their friends, and professionals can offer for them to live a more positive search and reunion.


Liberating Our Ancestors: Adult Colombian Adoptee First Family Reunions

 Adoption reunions, where the adult adopted person finds and meets their birth family member(s), can be complex endeavors given the myriad adoption related developmental issues present for both parties. Transnational adoption reunions add an additional layer of complexity regarding cultural and language barriers. Research from Korean adoptee transnational reunions suggests variations in experiences for the adult adopted person. However, little is known about how adult Colombian adopted persons experience transnational reunions with their Colombian first/birth families. In their qualitative study, the researchers will present the findings gathered from 17 adult Colombian adoptees who shared their reunion narratives. 

Recommendations for search and reunion for other transnational adoptees, adoptive families, and adoption professionals will be discussed.

Dr. Susan Branco can be reached at dr.susanbranco@gmail.com

A Reckoning: Reconfiguring the Role of Faith Communities in Adoption
Workshops 04:00 PM - 04:45 PM (America/New_York) 2022/03/26 20:00:00 UTC - 2022/03/26 20:45:00 UTC
The Christian Church has been and continues to be a significant stakeholder in adoption. This workshop will review past adoption policies of The Church that have impacted adoption practices. The workshop will utilize an Adoption Attuned perspective:
recognize adoption complexity, work to eliminate the causes that propel adoption, understand adoption is not totally benign, advocate for the rights of adoptees and first families.The presenters and participants will challenge, reimagine and reconfigure current adoption practices of faith communities by applying the Adoption Attuned perspective.
Using quotations from interviews with adult adoptees, we will examine how the words, actions, and presuppositions of faith communities impact adoptees. This will provide insight into the gap between the intent of faith communities to help adoptees and the reality of how adoptees experience the role of faith communities in their lives.
The interviews showed that: 
Adoptees yearn to be treated with dignity and respect and to have their lived experiences witnessed and validated. They do not want to be seen as projects in need of rescue, souls in need of salvation.They do not want to be evidence of their family's commitment to the mandates of their faith.Participants will realize the negative impact on adoptees when The Church: 
Uses scriptural interpretation as a basis to justify adoption and conflates secular and spiritual adoptionBelieves Adoption is the preferred choice for children in needPromotes secrecy in adoptionParticipants will identify steps for reconfiguring the faith community's approach to adoption, family preservation, issues of social justice, and racial equity and will be encouraged to implement changes in their own communities.
Based on our book, "Reimagining Adoption: What Adoptees Seek from Families and Faith," we assert that "One of the best ways faith communities can support children is to reduce the number of adoptions in the first place." 
Presenters Sally Ankerfelt
Presenter, Growing Intentional Families Together, LLC
GS
Gayle Swift
Driving Progress in Adoption: From `Child Placement' to `Family Success'
Workshops 03:15 PM - 04:00 PM (America/New_York) 2022/03/26 19:15:00 UTC - 2022/03/26 20:00:00 UTC
This highly interactive session will review the most significant and often-historic changes that have taken place in adoption during the last couple of generations. It will then draw on research and experience to explore and discuss what those involved in child welfare (e.g., children, families, and communities they impact) could/should be doing to improve practices today and into the future. The issues addressed will be framed in the context of advancing social justice, furthering racial equity, decreasing socioeconomic disparities, and systemically (and dramatically) increasing the inclusion of People with Lived Expertise in all aspects of the work involved in fueling progress.
Presenters Adam Pertman
Workshop Presenter, National Center On Adoption And Permanency
AM
Allison Maxon
Executive Director, National Center On Adoption And Permanency
Workshop presenter
,
National Center on Adoption and Permanency
Presenter
,
Growing Intentional Families Together, LLC
coach, author, adoptive parent, adoptee rights activist, co-founder of Growing Intentional Families Together
,
Growing Intentional Families Together
Ms. Angela Gee
Attendee
 Michelle Clairmont
Listening to Adoptee voices and research about First Families
,
YouTube BMom A Healing Journey
Ms. Grace Newton
Keynote Panelist, Author at Red Thread Broken
adoptee
,
The Brooklyn New School
+2 more attendees. View All
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