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Clinical and Practice Issues in Adoption: Bridging the Gap Between Adoptees Placed as Infants and as Older Children
By (Author) Victor K. Groza
By (author) Karen F. Rosenberg
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
30th September 2001
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Child, developmental and lifespan psychology
Sociology: family and relationships
155.445
Paperback
232
Width 156mm, Height 235mm
369g
Experts representing practitioners, researchers, advocates, and triad members, explore the similarities and differences between adoptees placed as infants and as older children. The book promotes better integration of theory, practice, policy, and research in working with clients who are members of the adoption triad: adoptees, birth parents, and adoptive families. For the first time, the separate practice areas are bridged, pointing out the significant overlap between the two populations and the similar interventions that can be used when working with adoptees regardless of their age at placement. Developed as a resource text for practitioners, researchers, students, and adoptive triad members, the first chapter provides an overview of the clinical and practice issues. Next the work presents issues surrounding infertility, and explores identity development with a following chapter on search and reunion issues. The fifth chapter discusses adoption support, both historically and with current developments and issues. The work then examines ethics and offers a model for ethical adoption practice. The seventh chapter explores treatment issues from a family systems perspective. Chapter 8 discusses the issues in transracial adoptions, examining history, policy, research and practice. The final chapter offers an analysis of international adoption, one of the modes of adoption that has expanded greatly over the last 10 years.
"Groza and Rosenberg have written a very useful volume....[T]here is much informative reading in this slim volume....Adoption practitioners have few resources to choose from to assist them in the important work that they do. This book is certainly a good starting point."-Journal of Sociology and Social Welfare
Groza and Rosenberg have written a very useful volume....[T]here is much informative reading in this slim volume....Adoption practitioners have few resources to choose from to assist them in the important work that they do. This book is certainly a good starting point.-Journal of Sociology and Social Welfare
The authors address their gap-bridging goal primarily from a social-work perspective, providing a solid introduction for the novice or budding professional who will be working with this population.-READINGS: A Journal of Reviews and Commentary in Mental Health
"The authors address their gap-bridging goal primarily from a social-work perspective, providing a solid introduction for the novice or budding professional who will be working with this population."-READINGS: A Journal of Reviews and Commentary in Mental Health
VICTOR GROZA is Professor of the Mandel School of Applied Social Sciences at Case Western Reserve University. He is the coauthor of Special-Needs Adoption: A Study of Intact Families (Praeger, 1992) and more recently wrote Successful Adoptive Families: A Longitudinal Study of Special Needs Adoption (Praeger, 1996). KAREN F. ROSENBERG is a clinical social worker who has been in practice for more than 25 years. In addition to her clinical work, Ms. Rosenberg is a consultant for private and public mental health and adoption agencies. She has contributed numerous articles on adoption to professional journals.