Even in a closed adoption, it is Arizona law that the prospective adoptive parents receive detailed, written non-identifying information about the baby and both sides of the birth family, including their medical and social history.
Not exact matches
We're often unprepared for this sadness, whether our kids know their birth families or not, because when many of us adopted our children, our training came from agencies that were grounded
in the
closed -
adoption model,
even if they had begun to stress open
adoption.
• it is
in the interests of the children involved that the pool from which prospective parents are drawn be as wide as possible; • discrimination on the ground of sexual orientation is a serious matter because it departs from the principle of treating people equally; • local authority evidence suggested that
even if the charity were to
close its
adoption service, children would be placed through other channels; and • local authority evidence suggested that gay and lesbian people were suitable prospective parents for hard to place children, and that such
adoptions have been successful.
We're often unprepared for this sadness, whether our kids know their birth families or not, because when many of us adopted our children, our training came from agencies that were grounded
in the
closed -
adoption model,
even if they had begun to stress open
adoption.
So we've switched agencies, started from scratch, and are pursuing her
adoption even though the region she was born
in is currently
closed to
adoption.