Pages related to adoption

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Expert recommends resources for National Adoption Month

National Adoption Month is recognized each November
November 19, 2012

NCFR member and adoption expert Hal Grotevant provides resources on adoption.

Child Welfare Information Gateway

Selecting and working with a therapist skilled in adoption

October 09, 2012

A fact sheet is available for families on choosing a therapist to help with adoption issues.

from 2012 NCFR Annual Conference
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303
8:00 am - 9:30 am | All posters are in the Atrium. For the Poster Symposium, at 9:00 am, those who wish to discuss posters 303-01 through 303-03 will move to the Curtis A Room.

Poster Session 6

POSTER SYMPOSIUM: Using a Decolonizing Framework for Therapy With American Indians. POSTER TOPICS: Family Stress/Coping; Parenting; Special Parenting Issues; Relational Factors on Attitudes Related to Suicide
Gay adoptive fathers

Research subjects are needed

for study on gay adoptive fathers
June 26, 2012

Are you a gay, adoptive father to a young child(ren)? If so, you are invited you to participate in doctoral dissertation research on resiliency among gay-fathered families.

National Center for Family and Marriage Research

Resources on adoption

November 08, 2011

The National Center for Family & Marriage Research has some data resources on adoption.

November is Adoption Month

resources available
October 13, 2011

The following websites offer information about adoption.

Bowling Green State University

Adoption Information from BGSU available

September 13, 2011

The National Center for Family and Marriage Research at Bowling Green State University has released some reports on adoptive families. 

from 2011 NCFR Annual Conference
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329
3:30 pm - 5:00 pm | Grand Ballroom B

Overturning Florida's Law Prohibiting Gay Men and Lesbians From Adopting

Special Session

Discussant: Abbie Goldberg
Facilitator: Lisa Taylor

In 1977, in the wake of Anita Bryant’s anti-gay “Save Our Children” campaign, the Florida legislature amended Florida’s Adoption Act to prohibit gay men and lesbians from adopting children. After several unsuccessful attempts in state and federal court, in September of 2010, the Third District Court of Appeal affirmed a trial court ruling finding the adoption ban unconstitutional under Florida’s Constitution. The case, commonly referred to as the Gill case, was brought in 2007 on behalf of Martin Gill, a gay South Florida man who sought to adopt two brothers who he had been caring for as a foster parent since 2004. One of the things that set the Gill case apart from previous failed attempts to overturn the law, was that it was the first time ever that a court considered the full breath of the social science research concerning adoption and parenting by gay men and lesbians. Indeed, in October of 2008, the trial court held a four day trial and heard from experts in child development, psychology, human sexuality, relationship stability, epidemiology, and HIV. In addition, the children brought separate claims and expert testimony on their own behalf and were represented separately through appointed counsel at the national law firm of Greenberg Traurig. Within minutes of the trial court’s decision finding the adoption ban unconstitutional, the State of Florida filed an appeal in the intermediate appellate court and vigorously defended the law, which was the only categorical ban of gay people from adopting in the entire country. In the appellate court, several amicus curiae (friend of the court) briefs were filed on behalf of Mr. Gill and the children by mainstream child health, welfare, and legal organizations including, for example, the NASW, the Evan B. Donaldson Adoption Institute, the American Psychological Association, the Florida Chapter of the American Academy of Pediatrics, and the Child Welfare League of America. In this presentation, Shelbi Day, Esq., a member of the ACLU’s legal team which represented Martin Gill in his legal challenge, will discuss the history of the adoption ban, previous unsuccessful challenges to the law, and the case and legal victory that finally overturned the law.