Available Formats
West Meets East: Americans Adopt Chinese Children
By (Author) Gail Gamache
By (author) Liming Liu
By (author) Richard Tessler
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
30th May 1999
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Sociology: family and relationships
Ethnic studies
362.7340973
Paperback
208
Who are the new families that are appearing on city streets, in suburban malls, and at Fourth of July celebrations The parents, in their 40s and 50s, are obviously Caucasian, and their very young daughters are obviously Chinese. This book is about these new American & Chinese families that are being formed through the mechanism of international adoption. The first survey of bicultural Chinese-American children, based on personal experience and rigorous research, both documents these adoptions and examines their implications for American society. This book will be of great use to couples considering or living with adopted Chinese children, professionals in social welfare and education, and scholars and other researchers involved with American multiculturalism.
West Meets East is a good reference and a must read for individuals and families who are considering adopting from China as well as for professionals who deal with such families.-Intimate Relationships, Family, and Life Course
"West Meets East is a good reference and a must read for individuals and families who are considering adopting from China as well as for professionals who deal with such families."-Intimate Relationships, Family, and Life Course
RICHARD TESSLER is Professor of Sociology and Associate Director of the University of Massachusetts' Social and Demographic Research Institute./e Professor Tessler has published extensively on social welfare issues. GAIL GAMACHE is Professor Sociology at the University of Massachusetts Amherst./e Her research has been presented in numerous academic and professional journals. LIMING LIU is a Ph.D candidate in Sociology at the University of Massachusetts Amherst and a research assistant at the Social and Demographic Research Institute.