TY - JOUR
T1 - Contact and adoption plans for children adopted from out-of-home care in New South Wales
AU - Luu, Betty
AU - Wright, Amy Conley
AU - Cashmore, Judith
PY - 2019
Y1 - 2019
N2 - In New South Wales (NSW), legislation prioritises open adoption over long-term foster care when restoration is not possible, and suitable kin or guardians cannot be found. The adoption application includes an adoption plan that outlines the nature of a child’s post-adoption contact with his or her birth family. There are efforts to include the views of the child, birth family, and prospective adoptive parents when developing this plan. This paper reports on the analysis of 89 adoption court files for 117 children from out-of-home care, finalised in 2017 by the Supreme Court of NSW. It focuses on the views of birth parents with respect to contact arrangements specified in the adoption plan. Three researchers independently coded the data, using an inductive approach based on grounded theory. The findings highlight the complexities in the changing relationship structures associated with adoption. Patterns of contact prior to adoption proceedings are highly predictive of plans for post-adoption contact. There are implications for social workers supporting positive contact experiences for children prior to an adoption order as well as the relationships between children’s prospective adoptive families and birth families.
AB - In New South Wales (NSW), legislation prioritises open adoption over long-term foster care when restoration is not possible, and suitable kin or guardians cannot be found. The adoption application includes an adoption plan that outlines the nature of a child’s post-adoption contact with his or her birth family. There are efforts to include the views of the child, birth family, and prospective adoptive parents when developing this plan. This paper reports on the analysis of 89 adoption court files for 117 children from out-of-home care, finalised in 2017 by the Supreme Court of NSW. It focuses on the views of birth parents with respect to contact arrangements specified in the adoption plan. Three researchers independently coded the data, using an inductive approach based on grounded theory. The findings highlight the complexities in the changing relationship structures associated with adoption. Patterns of contact prior to adoption proceedings are highly predictive of plans for post-adoption contact. There are implications for social workers supporting positive contact experiences for children prior to an adoption order as well as the relationships between children’s prospective adoptive families and birth families.
UR - https://hdl.handle.net/1959.7/uws:75337
U2 - 10.1080/0312407X.2019.1579351
DO - 10.1080/0312407X.2019.1579351
M3 - Article
SN - 0312-407X
VL - 72
SP - 404
EP - 418
JO - Australian Social Work
JF - Australian Social Work
IS - 4
ER -