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NSW nears gay adoption

NSW nears gay adoption

Written by Peter Hackney

Wednesday, 15 July 2009 13:34

The inquiry into same-sex adoption in NSW has handed down its findings, recommending that same-sex couples be allowed to adopt.

The NSW Legislative Council Standing Committee on Law and Justice made the recommendation yesterday at the conclusion of the Adoption Practices in NSW Inquiry.

Adoption Agency Goes Bankrupt

Adoption Agency Goes Bankrupt

Josh Pringle

Wednesday, July 15, 2009

The Ontario Government is working with bankruptcy trustees and the Federal Government to see how families affected by the bankruptcy of an adoption agency can be helped.

The Ontario agency that specializes in adoptions from Africa has gone bankrupt.

Adoption agency's bankruptcy devastates families

Adoption agency's bankruptcy devastates families

HAYLEY MICK

From Tuesday's Globe and Mail

Last updated on Tuesday, Jul. 14, 2009 03:00AM EDT

An agency that helps Canadians adopt children from Africa has filed for bankruptcy, creating an uncertain future for scores of children and financial and emotional hardship for their prospective new parents.

Kidsave Brings Columbian Orphans to LA in Search of a Forever Family

Kidsave Brings Columbian Orphans to LA in Search of a Forever Family

Yenne a Columbian orphan is staying inBrentwood in hopes of meeting his forever family. Will you help?

By Amy Sommer | July 09, 2009

photo courtesy of www.kidsave.org

Yenne is one in a group of 47 older children from Colombian orphanages who arrived in the U.S. to participate in Kidsave’s Summer Miracles program. Summer Miracles brings older orphaned children to the U.S. to enjoy a five-week summer visit with local families who volunteer to host them in their homes and give them a chance to experience life in a family. These are older children, ages 8 and older, who have little or no chance of finding adoptive parents in their own country.

International adoptee, Miss Indiana Courtni Hall, promotes adoption awareness

International adoptee, Miss Indiana Courtni Hall, promotes adoption awareness

July 4, 2:08 PM


International adoptee Courtni Hall*Miss Indiana, Courtni Hall, an international adoptee, is using her title to promote adoption awareness by being a spokesperson for Children's Hope International. Abandoned in Calcutta, India, at birth, weighing only 2 pounds 2 ounces, Hall was adopted at five months of age by an American couple and raised in Indiana.

Now 22 years old, Hall is the current Miss Indiana USA 2009 and the former Miss Indiana Teen USA 2004. She was named Miss Photogenic in the Miss Indiana USA 2009 competition and went on to compete at the annual Miss USA Pageant in April. Hall hopes to earn her Master's degree in Communications and eventually work as a television personality in the entertainment industry.

During her reign as Miss Indiana, Hall will be advocating for international adoption through a non-profit organization, Children's Hope International. This full service, licensed adoption and humanitarian agency offers adoption from China, Colombia,Ethiopia, Russia, and Vietnam, as well as providing relief programs for the children still without parental care in these countries, including orphan sponsorships.


http://www.examiner.com/x-7928-Charlotte-International-Adoption-Examiner~y2009m7d4-International-adoptee-Miss-Indiana-Courtni-Hall-promotes-adoption-awareness

Strategic partnership

Posted : Wed, 08 Jul 2009 13:54:21 GMT

Author : Child Welfare League of America (CWLA)

Category : Press Release

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Child snatched in RSPCA raid must be given up for adoption

Child snatched in RSPCA raid must be given up for adoption

By Tom Kelly

Last updated at 11:32 PM on 08th July 2009

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Ausschuss fragt nach Verbleib der Kinder

SterniPark: Babyklappe

Ausschuss fragt nach Verbleib der Kinder

Von Ulla Reinhard und Philip Volkmann-Schluck 8. Juli 2009, 04:00 U

Der Fall der vier Neugeborenen beschäftigt die Abgeordneten. Sozialsenator Dietrich Wersich (CDU): "Wir bitten den Verein um Auskunft."

Eine Babyklappe des Vereins SterniPark.

Same-sex adoption row brews

Same-sex adoption row brews

Brian Robins

July 9, 2009

SAME-SEX couples should be allowed to adopt children, a State Government parliamentary inquiry has narrowly recommended.

The inquiry's chairwoman, Labor MP Christine Robertson, said same sex-parents should be assessed on the same terms as anyone else - on whether they were suitable to adopt a child.

Kids from another country, with a past

Kids from another country, with a past

International adoption is never easy, and can cause pain that lasts a lifetime.

Irina's surname may be Spanish, but that's little more than a legal nicety. She has no home, and no family. She did for a while, but it didn't work out. Hers is one of the untold stories of failed adoption. In this case, Irina rejected her new family, although she insists she is not to blame. She was just 11 when she was brought to Spain with her sister from a Russian orphanage.

"I didn't know that I was coming to stay forever. I thought I could go home, where my mother lives," she explains, adding: "The authorities had taken us away from her because she drank too much, but we used to see her every now and then." Her first words in Spanish were "I want to go back to Russia." They would be the start of a long, sad story that would end in a Spanish children's home, surrounded by other children like her.

Over the last decade, Spanish families have adopted some 35,000 children from Eastern Europe, China, Nepal, Ethiopia, Congo, Colombia, Mexico, and Peru. Most of the time, the children make a new life for themselves in a caring, safe home. But not always. While the number of adoptions that actually fail is only around 1.5 percent, Ana Berástegui, who teaches at the University of Comillas, and is one of the few academics to have carried out a study of the problem, estimates that one in five families with adopted children "faces very difficult situations" that will bring them close to returning the child to the authorities.