1st Edition

Adoption Law and Human Rights International Perspectives

By Kerry O'Halloran Copyright 2018
    364 Pages
    by Routledge

    362 Pages
    by Routledge

    In recent decades, there have been many changes to adoption law and practice, such as a sharp decline in the voluntary relinquishment of children, an increase in the number consigned to public care, and an abrupt decrease in those made available on an intercountry basis. Additionally, human rights are becoming more prominent, particularly in relation to issues such as: non-consensual adoption; the ethics of intercountry adoption; the eligibility of LGBT adopters; the impact of commercial surrogacy; and the sometimes conflicting rights of birth parents and adoptees when accessing agency birth records. 

    In this book, O’Halloran presents a comparative analysis of the interaction between adoption law and human rights in common law (England and the US), civil law (France and Germany), and Asiatic traditions (Japan and China), while also developing a matrix of legal functions to assist in identifying and analysing areas of tension between human rights and adoption. 

    This book is intended for a lawyer readership, whether professional, student or academic: researchers and postgraduate students in subjects such as social work, social policy and politics may also find it helpful.

    1.  Introduction;  2: Chapter One: Human Rights and the Concepts, Principles and Social Construct of Adoption;  3. Chapter Two: The Domestic Legal Framework;  4. Chapter Three: The International Legal Framework & Intercountry Adoption;  5: Chapter Four: The Adoption Process, Human Rights and the ECtHR;  6: Chapter Five: England; 7: Chapter Six: U.S.;  8: Chapter Seven: France;  9: Chapter Eight: Germany;  10: Chapter Nine: Japan;  11: Chapter Ten: China;  12: Chapter Eleven: Adoption & Human Rights: National Tensions and International Standards;  13: Conclusion.

    Biography

    Kerry O'Halloran is an academic with extensive adoption experience, due to having worked as both a social worker and a lawyer. He has also served for 11 years on a UK adoption panel, and has contributed quarterly for the past 17 years to the BAAF Adoption & Fostering journal.