Title: GLOBALISATION AND INTERNATIONAL ADOPTION FROM CHINA
1GLOBALISATION AND INTERNATIONAL ADOPTION FROM
CHINA
- Professor Monica Dowling
- The Open University
2Globalisation
- Globalisation is not only or even primarily
about economic interdependence, but about the
transformation of time and space in our lives.
Distant events whether economic or not, affect us
more directly and immediately than ever before.
Conversely, decisions we take as individuals are
often global in their implications.
(Giddens, 1998 p.31)
3GLOBALISATION
- Closer links between different countries
particularly in relation to culture - Worldwide communication through media and
electronic systems, travel, migration, and
improved transportation
- Organisations that transcend national boundaries
and support or replace national government
organisations - Economic growth frequently accompanied by
widening economic equalities - (George and Wilding 2002)
4Attitudes to International Adoption
- Abolitionists
- Pragmatists
- Promoters
5International Adoption from China
- 1991 less than 100 international adoptions
- 2001 7725, 2005 14493, 2006 10,743
international adoptions - Adoption ratio per 1000 live births China 0.85,
Russia 4.9, Guatemala 8.8, India 0.03 - Total number of births in China per year
17million (2008 UNICEF)
6Impact of Globalisation on International Adoption
from China
- Media focus on Chinas abandoned children and the
state orphanages - Poverty and unemployment among migrant workers,
no welfare cover, fewer institutions that do not
require payment (leading to abandonment) - China and the UK more information and knowledge
about international adoption - internet
- Some Chinese families now wealthy enough to
ignore fines for additional children - Women no longer employed in state owned
enterprises or employed in new factories poor
conditions - Glamorisation of West adoption seen as
opportunity for Chinese children
7Impact of Globalisation on International Adoption
from China
- Hague Convention on the Protection of Children
and Co-operation in respect of Inter-country
Adoption (1993) as contained in the Convention on
the rights of the Child (1989) includes - Ensuring that adoption is authorised only by
recognised authorities - No one shall derive improper financial gain from
an activity related to inter-country adoption
850 years ago
- NO UN Convention on the Rights of the Child
- NO Hague Convention
- NO International Adoption with worldwide
regulation
9TODAY The principle of subsidiarity is central
to the controversy surrounding international
adoption
States should guarantee permanency planning in
the shortest possible time for each child
deprived of his/her parents. Policies should work
to promote family preservation and national
solutions, rather than to hinder inter-country
adoption.
The Hague Conference on Private International Law
2008
10Globalisation and the Future
- International and National Adoption -
Organisations need to adapt their regulatory
functions to fit a globalised world.
11Future Research Initiatives
- The strategic and political importance of welfare
in developed and developing countries - Global regulation for international welfare
problems - A Guide to Best Practice in relation to
International Adoption for all Nation States
accessible online
12How will research benefit the child not yet born?