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NAS adopting from Nicaragua

Nederlandse Adoptie Stichting

5 June at 12:22 ·

Nicaragua: ¡Bienvenido en su casa! De vlaggen mogen uit want Camilo Andres komt vandaag thuis met zijn papa en mama. Welkom thuis lieve jongen, we hopen dat je in Nederland heel gelukkig zult worden.

Nederlandse Adoptie Stichting's photo.

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Nana Oye Lithur gives assurance of government’s commitment to child protection

Nana Oye Lithur gives assurance of government’s commitment to child protection

Gov't of Ghana To Strengthen Child Protection System - Nana Oye Lithur

By News Ghana - Jun 12, 2016 0

Government of Ghana says it will to continue enhancing Child Protection Systems in the country since it is linked with sustainable development and to the growth of the nation as well.

Nana Oye Lithur

BOSTON COLLEGE AND HARVARD PROFESSORS ADVOCATE FOR UNPARENTED CHILDRE

BOSTON COLLEGE AND HARVARD PROFESSORS ADVOCATE FOR UNPARENTED CHILDREN

BC NEWS, NEWSJUNE 12, 2016BY ROHIT BACHANI

In late May, Democratic co-sponsors David Cicilline of Rhode Island, Brian Higgins of New York, Jim McDermott of Washington, and Republican Representative Tom Marino of Pennsylvania introduced a piece of legislation that would enable the United States government to remedy institutionalized discrimination by reforming domestic adoption practices. Professor Elizabeth Bartholet, Faculty Director of the Child Advocacy Program at Harvard Law School and Professor Paulo Barrozo, Director of the Clough Center for Constitutional Democracy at Boston College Law School, have sought to encourage adoption reform in such a capacity over the past few years and have been following recent congressional initiatives to address the dilemma. The bill introduced in late May can be said to build on the provisions that Professors Bartholet and Barrozo have advocated for in earlier bills, including the Children in Families First Act (CHIFF).

The new bill seeks to make the State Department discontinue discriminatory practices against institutionalized children whose fundamental rights have been violated through faulty adoption practices, the passage of which "would put the United States in an important position of international human rights leadership," Professor Barrozo commented in an article co-authored with Professor Bartholet.

The bill can also be said to represent the culmination, per se, of pleas to Congress made by Harvard and Boston College faculty members in recent years to implement reformative measures with respect to the faulty and imprudent adoption system. For instance, in 2014, 34 faculty members from Harvard Law School and 24 from Boston College Law School signed and sent a letter to Congress encouraging it to pass the Children in Families First Act–a piece of legislation that laid some of the groundwork for the introduction of the May 2016 bill.

SA baby's chance at new life in Canada foiled

SA baby's chance at new life in Canada foiled

CRIME & COURTS / 13 Jun '16, 11:00am

Tania Broughton

Durban - A 2-year-old boy’s chance at a new life in Canada is in jeopardy because of the interference of a local magistrate.

The boy, who was dumped in a pit latrine by his mother just after his birth, is caught up in a legal tug of war between a local social worker and a Canadian couple who want to adopt him and - on the other side - the magistrate who claims this is “child trafficking” and wants to return him to his granny, whom he does not know.

50 kids left in limbo by Canada/SA trafficking row

50 kids left in limbo by Canada/SA trafficking rowCRIME & COURTS / 13 Jun '16, 11:00am

Tania Broughton

Durban - Diplomatic officials in Canada reacted swiftly to allegations that South African babies were being “trafficked” to that country by putting a hold on all visa applications, effectively stopping all adoptions in November 2010.

The moratorium lasted for almost three years before the provincial director of public prosecutions declined to prosecute.

File photo: Mark Blinch. Credit: REUTERS

Memorandum by Baroness Nicholson of Winterbourne MEP (EU Charter - UNCRC)

You are here: Parliament home page > Parliamentary business > Publications and Records > Committee Publications > All Select Committee Publications > Lords Select Committees > European Union > European Union

Select Committee on European Union Written Evidence

Memorandum by Baroness Nicholson of Winterbourne MEP

A. SUMMARY

1. I support the Charter of Fundamental Rights as a restatement of the core values of the European Union since its inception.

Sentencing Hearings Next Week for International Adoption Guides (IAG)

Sentencing Hearings Next Week for International Adoption Guides (IAG)

Posted on June 11, 2016

Three International Adoption Guides officials could be sentenced, finally, next week.

They were indicted by the U.S. Justice Department in February 2014, after lengthy investigations. They are scheduled for sentencing next week, having pled guilty over a year ago to charges of conspiring to defraud the United States by bribery and fraudulent documents, all involving several Ethiopian adoptions.

The sentencing hearing for Mary Mooney (IAG’s executive director) is scheduled for 11am on June 16. Mooney had pled guilty in January 2015, then changed her plea to “no contest” several months later. In August 2015, the judge ruled against the “no contest” plea, and the guilty verdict was reinstated.

Terre des Hommes: Trafficking project Advisory Board

Advisory Board

John Davies

Dr. John Davies is a fellow of the Royal Society of Arts, a member of the European Commission's expert network on migration, integration and social cohesion and a visiting research fellow at the Sussex Centre for Migration Research at the University of Sussex. He has worked among vulnerable migrants since 1977 and has consistently worked with migrant people to maximise the benefits of migration while seeking to reduce the risks. He has extensive experience of vulnerable migration in the Gulf States, South and South East Asia, Europe and particularly the Balkans where he has lived and worked for almost 20 years. He has repeatedly and successfully challenged controversial State controls over the mobility of women and children that presume a common agenda regarding the best interests of such groups. His research and publications on trafficking emphasise the diversity of trafficking experiences and the need to acknowledge the self-solutions of trafficked people to their exploitation. His latest book is an ethnographic examination of the experiences of trafficked Albanian women in France that challenges common presumptions regarding the migration motivation and trafficking vulnerability of Albanian women.

John Frederick

John Frederick is a technical consultant for international organizations in South Asia. He designs research activities in human trafficking, sex work and migration, and assists in the development of strategies and capacity-building activities for governments and local organizations conducting the recovery and social integration of victims of trafficking, domestic violence, armed conflict and sexual abuse. He is the author of Fallen Angels: the Sex Workers of South Asia, among other publications.