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New Jersey Adoption Resource Clearing House

The one-stop resource for those touched by adoption.

1-877-4ARCHNJ (1-877-427-2465)
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Untangling the Web – The Internet’s Transformative Impact on Adoption Policy and Practice Perspective

November 28, 2015 by NJ ARCH Editor

Untangling the Web

It is difficult to describe the extent to which the Internet is changing the everyday realities of adoption – and the lives of the millions of people it encompasses – without using words that sound hyperbolic. But a yearlong examination of the effects of this very new technology on a very old social institution indicates that they are systemic, profound, complex and permanent. Social media, search engines, blogs, chat rooms, webinars, photo-listings and an array of other modern communications tools, all facilitated by the Internet, are transforming adoption practices, challenging current laws and policies, offering unprecedented opportunities and resources, and raising critical ethical, legal and procedural issues about which adoption professionals, legislators and the personally affected parties, by their own accounts, have little reliable information, research or experience to guide them.

Published by:

All contents (c) 2012 by the Evan B. Donaldson Adoption Institute.
Send questions and comments to info@adoptioninstitute.org

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Untangling the Web – The Internet’s Transformative Impact on Adoption Policy and Practice Perspective

Filed Under: Handbooks

Testimony to NYS Human Services Budget Hearing

November 28, 2015 by NJ ARCH Editor

Testimony to NYS Human Services Budget Hearing

Presented by:

Marie Dolfi, LCSW

Volunteer Advocacy Chairperson, NYSCCC

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Testimony to NYS Human Services Budget Hearing

Filed Under: Handbooks

LTC Guide Long Term Care

November 28, 2015 by NJ ARCH Editor

LTC guide
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LTC Guide Long Term Care

Filed Under: Handbooks

The Children’s Bureau Legacy

November 28, 2015 by NJ ARCH Editor

The Children’s Bureau Legacy

On April 9, 1912, the U.S. Children’s Bureau became the first national government agency in the world to focus solely on the needs of children. During the past 100 years, the Children’s Bureau has played a critical role in addressing vital issues affecting families—from reducing infant mortality and eradicating child labor, to preventing child maltreatment and promoting permanency for children and youth.

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The Children’s Bureau Legacy

Filed Under: Handbooks

Openness in Adoption – From Secrecy and Stigma to Knowledge and Connections

November 28, 2015 by NJ ARCH Editor

Openess in Adoption

This report is the first in a series the Institute plans to publish that will address the phenomenon of openness in domestic infant adoptions. It summarizes research knowledge on the topic and presents findings from a survey of 100 infant adoption programs in the U.S. regarding their practices around openness and the qualities that facilitate successful open adoption relationships. The institute is also in the final stages of preparing a related curriculum for pre-adoptive parents and expectant parents considering adoptive placement for their children.

Policy & Practice Perspectives are research-based publications that focus on important and timely issues in the field. This report was researched and written by Dr. Deborah H. Siegel, Professor of Social Work, Rhode Island College, and Susan Livingston Smith, Program and Project Director of the Evan B. Donaldson Adoption Institute. It was edited by Adam Pertman, Executive Director of the Institute. We are deeply grateful to several graduate student interns who assisted with this research – Rebecca Knickmeier, Sarah Malloy-Good and Preeti Vissa. We also appreciate the assistance of several adoption scholars and professionals who reviewed this paper and provided research and editorial assistance. They include Dr. Ruth McRoy, Leslie Pate Mackinnon, and Dr. Harold Grotevant.

Send questions and comments to info@adoptioninstitute.org.

All contents (c) 2012 by the Evan B. Donaldson Adoption Institute.

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Openness in Adoption – From Secrecy and Stigma to Knowledge and Connections

Filed Under: Handbooks

Adopting as a Single Parent

November 28, 2015 by NJ ARCH Editor

Adopting as a single parent

Many single people are choosing to adopt, reflecting national trends toward greater acceptance of nontraditional families. Nationally, approximately one-quarter of children and youth, or about 22 million, are growing up in single-parent households.  In 2011, nearly one-third of adoptions from foster care were completed by unmarried people. This included adoptions by 1,400 single men and more than 13,000 single women.  Several research studies have shown that adopted children raised by single parents experience outcomes that are as good as, if not better than, those for children adopted by couples.

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Adopting as a Single Parent

Filed Under: Handbooks

Parenting a Child Who Has Been Sexually Abused: A Guide for Foster and Adoptive Parents

November 28, 2015 by NJ ARCH Editor

Parentig a child
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Parenting a Child Who Has Been Sexually Abused: A Guide for Foster and Adoptive Parents

Filed Under: Handbooks

A Need to Know: Enhancing Adoption Competence Among Mental Health Professionals

November 28, 2015 by NJ ARCH Editor

A_Need_to_Know

For a variety of reasons, adopted individuals and their families are more likely to use mental health services than is the general population. Helping adoptive parents manage these life complexities for themselves and their children can be a challenge, often requiring the help of professionals. Adopted individuals, as children and through their life cycles, can encounter a range of concerns (e.g. ones related to identity) with which they want and need professional assistance. Furthermore, birth/first mothers and fathers also frequently need the services of mental health counselors as they struggle to cope with their loss and, for a growing number of these individuals, to find satisfying ways of managing ongoing relationships with their children and their adoptive families. Mental health and allied professionals must be prepared to meet the needs of these individuals and families. They must possess not only the foundations for competent clinical practice, but also a deep understanding of the unique issues involved.

Published by:

Policy Perspective
August 2013
Funded by: The Donaldson Adoption Institute

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A Need to Know: Enhancing Adoption Competence Among Mental Health Professionals

Filed Under: Handbooks

2025 KIDS COUNT Data Book

November 28, 2015 by NJ ARCH Editor

Untitled

2025 State Trends in Child Well-Being
By the Annie E. Casey Foundation

This year’s KIDS COUNT Data Book presents a picture of child well-being as the nation recovered from the COVID-19 pandemic. Comparisons are made between 2019 and 2023 where possible.
During this time, six indicators worsened, while three stayed the same and seven improved. The child poverty rate dropped and the employment security of parents improved relative to 2019. At the same time, educational achievement was hit hard and the child and teen death rate climbed.

To access the report please click here

2025 KIDS COUNT Data Book

Filed Under: Handbooks

A Guide for Father Involvement in System of Care

November 28, 2015 by NJ ARCH Editor

Guide for Father Involvement

This guide shares information about the importance of fathers in the lives of their children, and it identifies potential consequences if they are not involved. It also offers strategies for systems and families, especially those who are involved in systems of care, to help fathers become more involved. Section I discusses statistics about the presence and absence of fathers in families.

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A Guide for Father Involvement in System of Care

Filed Under: Handbooks

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