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In line with current international thinking about children's privacy and safety, we do not publish children's' stories, names or photos on our website. However, many members of ICANZ are keen to meet with you in person, to share their stories and encourage you during your adoption. We have 14 parent network coordinators throughout NZ who can arrange for you to contact others in your region. Please contact the ICANZ office for more details.

 

 

 

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"When your adoption is finalised...
It's not the completion of the adoption...
Its the beginning!"

 

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ARTICLES OF INTEREST

Find out more about the lives and needs of institutionalised children

Discover how the Hague Convention protects children, birth parents and adoptive parents in an intercountry adoption

Read this inspiring story of an older child's adoption.

 

Resources & Articles

The developmental needs of institutionalized children are well documented and we advise you to educate yourself on this topic so that you can offer wise parenting to these children and have realistic expectations, not idealistic ones. Here are some online articles you may find interesting:

The Power of Unmet Expectations
Jayne Schooler, 2009

This article discusses how the expectations of the adoptive parents has an impact on the adoption experience for both parents and children. Parents need to adapt their expectations to enhance the bonding and settling-in process.

Adopting an Institutionalized Child: What are the Risks?
Dana Johnson, 2007

This study relates to International adoption in that it attempts to determine the short and long-term health of children that have been institutionalized with regards to body and mind development. His conclusions touch home because everyone wants to know will my baby be healthy when I get her or not. What are my chances? Read more.
Dr. Johnson’s report addresses the following conclusions from varies research surveys:

Post Adoption Survey of Russian and Eastern European Children
Rainbow House International by Donna Clauss, M.A., L.M.S.W. & Sonia Baxter , Sept 1997

This survey, completed by 206 of the 215 families it was sent to, confirmed that the overwhelming majority of Russian children do attach to their adoptive families and had very few of the attachment resistive characteristics. 73% were delayed in development on arrival, and after an average of only 23 months in their adoptive family this had dropped to 32% delayed in development. Language was the most common on-going delay.

Foreign-born kids have relatively few behavioural problems

A new study disputes the notion that children adopted from other countries tend to be badly damaged emotionally because of the hardships they had to endure. The analysis of more than 50 years of international data found that these youngsters are only slightly more likely than non-adopted children to have behavioural problems such as aggressiveness and anxiety. And they actually seem to have fewer problems than children adopted within their own countries.

Researchers Femmie Juffer and Marinus H. Van IJzendoorn of Leiden University in the Netherlands pooled results from 137 studies on adoptions by parents living in the United States, Canada, Europe, Australia, New Zealand and Israel. In the study, adopted children in general had more behsaviour problems than non-adopted youngsters, regardless of where the adoption took place - a result that is not surprising, since both groups often suffer deprivation and come from broken families.

But with backgrounds that often include abandonment, orphanages and civil strife, foreign adoptees are sometimes thought of as difficult, disruptive children, an image that the study does not support, the researchers said.

"Before adoption, most international adoptees experience insufficient medical care, malnutrition, maternal separation, and neglect and abuse in orphanages," the researchers said. But to their surprise, they found that these children do well and are largely able to catch up with their non-adopted counterparts.

 

Search and Reunion Articles

The Impact of Birth Country Travel

Identity is a continuum. Who I am today is not who I will be tomorrow. For tomorrow I will be a culmination of who I have been in all my yesterdays and who I hope to be in my "tomorrows".

Seaching Questions

Adoptive parents around the globe are seeking their children's first families, even before these children voice an opinion on the matter. But do we know what we're doing?

Ten Questions to Ask Yourself

Our adoptions did not end the day we were placed in the waiting arms of our adoptive parents.

Tips on Searching and Reunions

Information summarised from the Adoption Reunion Handbook.

 

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