The blogosphere is humming with ethical adoption talk. I’ve been thinking about this for awhile and wanted to talk about the specific challenges of adopting ethically in a domestic infant adoption like ours.
First off, if you’re adopting or are in a position to adopt, you’re by definition privileged. As helpless as we might feel while waiting for our children — dealing with bureaucracies, waiting for official approval, jumping through hoops — we really have the power. If we were powerless, we wouldn’t have options and we adopters have options. You know what Spiderman’s uncle says, right? “With great power comes great responsibility.”
Some people argue that people who have the means and desire to adopt should use our means and desire to dismantle adoption. They say we should protest policies that make adoption necessary — here in the US or in other countries. They say we should adopt the children most in need of a family (and here people argue like crazy — which kids deserve families the most?). We should put aside our needs and work for the greater good, the definition of which is again up for debate.
I disagree with this, obviously. I think adoption is a reality and that being an adopter doesn’t automatically make us bad guys but we do have to watch our step.
I think our responsibility is to do what we can to make sure our individual adoptions are done ethically. Morally speaking, since people tend to place one kind of adoption above another, I’d say domestic infant adoption has the potential to be one of the least ethical kinds of adoption on an individual level. Here’s why: Because we are often personally part of the mother’s decision as she makes an adoption plan, our very presence can change those plans to work in our favor.
Now this doesn’t always happen. Nat’s parents weren’t part of Mama Rose’s decision. She made that decision before contacting the agency, which was after Nat was born. Ethically, that was a pretty clean adoption but sometimes women want to see profiles before they meet their babies and they have that right. The only problem is that it makes everything murkier.
Mary Wineman Axess, an adult adoptee, writes:
In the context of an ethically rigorous program like the one in Traverse City-in which there is an alertness on everyone’s part regarding the possibility of even the most subtle coercive influences-I think contact between a woman and the prospective adoptive parents of her child can be positive and beneficial. But the potential for a coercive influence in the relationship between prospective adoptive parents and prospective birth mothers is high, especially when the birth mother has little or no other sources of emotional or financial support; it is not uncommon for a young woman in this circumstance to end up feeling that she “owes” the couple her baby.
source: What We Must Learn About Open Adoption, For Our Children’s Sake
See, that’s the great challenge of adopting domestically. Our very presence changes things. Our smiling faces in the profiles, our friendly voices on the other end of the phone, our sympathetic nods when we finally meet. As individuals, we tilt the situation — subtly or like velvet hammers — in our favor.
I was very aware of this when I had those long phone conversations with J before Madison was born. I would talk to her about parenting — about resources and possibilities — with the guilt-ridden understanding of this irony: The more ethical I tried to be, the more I built her trust and so the more likely she would feel good about placing Madison with me. And it was made more difficult because once J was talking to me, she lost interest in talking to her social worker. So it was me — my voice — who walked her through it.
What potential for abuse, eh?
I bring this up because adopting domestically is sticky. (And adopting a black baby doesn’t buy us any points despite the condemnation heaped on those who won’t.) Those of us who do it have to watch ourselves carefully. We have to acknowledge that we are stomping on butterfly wings all over the place. Every time we communicate with a woman considering adoption — whether it’s with our profiles or actual face-to-face contact or anything in between — we have to do as much as we can to stay morally honest. We have to remember that as baby hungry as our arms may be, that this is not our story. We’ve been invited into a woman’s life as she contemplates what will likely be the biggest decision she’ll ever have to make. At the end of it — whether she chooses to parent, place with us, or place with another family — we need to be able to say, “I was ethical in my dealings with her.”
I never thought I would adopt the way we adopted because I had such distaste for it. I really thought (and still think) that adopting a child who is already free to be adopted (whether in a foster care situation or through an international adoption) is an ethically safer way to go. Heck, when I read The Kid I knew that I could never ever ever leave a crying woman’s bedside carrying her baby away with me.
Well, never say never, I guess.
I’m not trying to convince people not to adopt domestically or even to imply that every domestic adopter has done something immoral (I don’t think I have although I wrestled with a lot of guilt — as long-time readers know — in the months after Madison was born). What I’m saying is that every adoption has its ethical challenges and the ones present in domestic infant adoption are, in my opinion, the most personal and also the ones that are most in our control. We have to keep our noses clean.
Is anyone interested in writing about the ethical challenges of their adoptions — international or foster care — on their blogs? I’m interested and if you’d leave a comment or ping me so I could go read it, that’d be great.
I have two kids and a delightfully odd husband, Brett. My children are Noah (born to us in 1997) and Madison (born to her first mom, Pennie, in 2004 and brought to our family through a domestic, open adoption). They are my inspiration and also the reason I don't get more done around here.
I'm a writer and sometimes I get published, which is a nice thing. I write for joy, I write for money and when I'm very lucky, both things happen at the same time. My work appears in national publications including Yoga Journal, Disney's Family.com, Utne, Wondertime, Brain Child and Salon. Currently I am working on a book about my daughter's adoption and seeking representation for the proposal. I also own Smart Cookie Communications with my husband.
beth
June 17th, 2005 at 1:26 pm
I may be really tired today, but I understand from your last paragraph that you’re interested in ethical challenges of folks who have or are adopting internationally or through foster care. S. and I are adopting domestically, but I may write about it anyway on my blog, because now you have gotten me thinking about ethical considerations, which is what moved me to make a comment.
I’ve read your adoption archives, and they really brought up some issues that I hadn’t yet considered–today’s post on ethics was the same way. Right now I’m caught up in the process and I’m sliding towards some end watching the scenery whiz by (or squeezing my eyes shut). Your thoughts provide me with a sharp object to dig in, stop moving, look around, and think about things. Thank you so very much.
Amy
June 17th, 2005 at 2:08 pm
Hi Dawn - I don’t know if I have ever commented here before but I have been reading for a while and I love your blog.
I am years away from adopting but I do think I will go that route at some point so I read everything I can get my hands on. I am particularly drawn to open adoption or a foster care/adoption.
I actually don’t think that the ethical waters are any less murky for international or foster/adopt situations actually. I just think that the difference is in the murkiness you know vs. the murkiness you don’t know. I think most International adoptions are completely above the boards. China and Guatemala (I’m sure there are others those are just the programs I know the most about) particularly seem to have instituted policies that protect birth mothers and children from situations where baby brokering is a possibility. But there are some very sketchy situations out there too. Did you see that 20/20 piece on Cambodian adoptions? It was very disturbing. And while I don’t think that that is the norm in international adoption by any means it made me uncomfortable enough that I’m not sure I would feel comfortable going that route until some better safeguards against any possibility of baby brokering are put into place. I think your point about acting as a watchdog for our own situations is a really key one. There was at least one family in that piece on 20/20 who had real questions about the ethics of their situation before leaving Cambodia with their child. I can understand being torn at that point because you have bonded with this baby and have spent tens of thousands of dollars and want so badly to believe everything is on the up and up. I can see how when put in that situation you might ignore the signals that there is something not right about the situation. As much as we hate to think about it for some people adoption is a business. There is a lot of money changing hands and any time there is a lot of money involved there is a real possibility for corruption.
And of course in foster care there is always the question about whether termination of parental rights was warranted. Were all the resources offered that could have allowed the birth family to parent adequately? Obviously there are many, many situations where there is no question because the abuse or neglect is so clear-cut or the rights were surrendered voluntarily but there is certainly a potential for murkiness there too. Especially since the people making the judgment calls carry their own preconceptions about families with children in foster care into the situation.
None of this is enough to turn me away from adoption. I still think that it is a wonderful thing and a really great way to form a family. But I think you are right that we need to know about the potential ethical pitfalls involved with whatever type of adoption we choose and do our best within our own situations to make sure we behave ethically and the rights of our kids and their birth families are protected. We cannot leave it all up to the agencies and the lawyers.
This group seems to be doing some great work on ethics and adoption.
http://www.ethicanet.org/itemlist.php?pagestyle=itemlist
Michelle
June 17th, 2005 at 3:36 pm
I think I’ll write about this tonight in my blog. Gotta go to work first
LisaV
June 17th, 2005 at 4:32 pm
I have always been bothered by the fact that something so wonderful for us, was the source of someone else’s pain. But I feel like I have a pretty good perspective on the context of the situation. I probably will write something about open adoption this weekend. I want sometime to think about it.
Kath
June 17th, 2005 at 7:12 pm
You are my muse…here comes the word train.
sster
June 17th, 2005 at 9:24 pm
I have struggled a lot with the question of whether or not adoption is the best response to the problem of poverty and parentless children. In some ways, though, it is almost the same question as what is the ‘best’ way to adopt. There are many possible responses to any social problem; in this case, adoption is a particularly (in my mind) good one. Is it as ‘good’ as pouring that same money into women’s shelters and prenatal health programs? It’s impossible to say. It’s simply not measureable. What we DO know, however, is that a whole host of responses is needed, and not everyone can do all of them (no one can, really). For us, adoption is the best response we have. Will we still vote for universal health care and a healthier welfare system? Will we support and encourage others to work to bridge the class gap? Definitely. But adoption is our focus–not because it’s the ‘easy’ option, but because it’s the best option for our family.
Sarah
June 17th, 2005 at 11:55 pm
I’ve been thinking a lot lately about the ethics of adoption lately, especially single parent adoption.
I’d never thought about it this way, but I think you may have hit the nail on the head here by phrasing it in terms of potential rather than inherent ethics. So domestic infant adoption might be the least ethical choice using the default settings (ie, when adoptive parents don’t even consider ethics), but it may have the greatest potential for parents to influence the ethics of the choices made such that the final outcome might well be more ethical than other types of adoption.
I realize that one can’t really measure and compare ethics in quite that way, but it’s a useful visualization for me. Thanks for making me think, as always.
Michelle
June 18th, 2005 at 7:08 pm
Dawn, I wrote about this on my blog. Thanks for the topic idea.