The Importance Of A Psychological Evaluation Before An Adoption
Posted in Uncategorized on 06/22/2010 12:00 am byAn adoption is the act of taking on unrelated persons as one’s own relations, nearly always as a son or daughter, and adoption screening refers to the practice of matching “like with like,” a procedure whereby the most suitable adoptees are paired with the most suitable adopters.
Adoption screenings are advocated by many concerned activists, though it has still not yet become the norm. But adoption screening makes sense, since, in the assumption of parental duties over those not of immediate kin, whom usually one has never before seen, there may be a really great chance of misunderstanding. For instance, some wishing to adopt a girl might not be equally prepared to adopt a boy. Or an adopter may not be prepared to deal with the particular challenges of a physically or mentally handicapped child.
Adoption screening inside the United States and much of Europe occurs within a cultural tradition that has been informed by that of the Roman Empire, and it was not until only about fifty to no more than roughly a hundred years ago when adoptees were even considered adoptees as being equal to so-called full-blooded relations. Such bias had long been manifested in such norms as not even recognizing any legal inheritance rights for them.
In fact, adoptions were generally indistinguishable from indentured servitude at best, whereby room and board was provided in return for labor for a set number of years; it has to be considered a relative improvement when adoptions became a lot more like apprenticeships, providing at least some training in marketable skills.
In reality, that was the norm for millennia throughout the world. Adoption screening can thus be seen as the latest development in a adoptee-centric ethos, or philosophy. And within adoption screening these days, the primary challenges involve cross-cultural and cross-racial adoptions, not to mention adoptions made by homosexuals.