Literature DB >> 17220114

Processes linked to contact changes in adoptive kinship networks.

Nora Dunbar1, Manfred H M van Dulmen, Susan Ayers-Lopez, Jerica M Berge, Cinda Christian, Ginger Gossman, M Susan M Henney, Tai J Mendenhall, Harold D Grotevant, Ruth G McRoy.   

Abstract

The purpose of this study was to reveal underlying processes in adoptive kinship networks that experienced increases or decreases in levels of openness during the child's adolescent years. Intensive case study analyses were conducted for 8 adoptive kinship networks (each including an adoptive mother, adoptive father, adopted adolescent, and birth mother), half of whom had experienced an increase in openness from indirect (mediated) to direct (fully disclosed) contact and half of whom had ceased indirect contact between Waves 1 and 2 of a longitudinal study. Adoptive mothers tended to be more involved in contact with the birth mother than were adoptive fathers or adopted adolescents. Members of adoptive kinship networks in which a decrease in level of contact took place had incongruent perspectives about who initiated the stop in contact and why the stop took place. Birth mothers were less satisfied with their degree of contact than were adoptive parents. Adults' satisfaction with contact was related to feelings of control over type and amount of interactions and permeability of family boundaries. In all adoptive kinship networks, responsibility for contact had shifted toward the adopted adolescent regardless of whether the adolescent was aware of this change in responsibility.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 17220114     DOI: 10.1111/j.1545-5300.2006.00182.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Fam Process        ISSN: 0014-7370


  5 in total

1.  Ethical Considerations in Adoption Research: Navigating Confidentiality and Privacy Across the Adoption Kinship Network.

Authors:  Albert Y H Lo; Harold D Grotevant; Ruth G McRoy
Journal:  Adopt Q       Date:  2019-01-26

2.  Many Faces of Openness in Adoption: Perspectives of Adopted Adolescents and Their Parents.

Authors:  Harold D Grotevant; Gretchen Miller Wrobel; Lynn Von Korff; Brooke Skinner; Jane Newell; Sarah Friese; Ruth G McRoy
Journal:  Adopt Q       Date:  2008-07-01

3.  Post-adoption contact, adoption communicative openness, and satisfaction with contact as predictors of externalizing behavior in adolescence and emerging adulthood.

Authors:  Harold D Grotevant; Martha Rueter; Lynn Von Korff; Christopher Gonzalez
Journal:  J Child Psychol Psychiatry       Date:  2010-10-18       Impact factor: 8.982

4.  Contact Between Birth and Adoptive Families During the First Year Post-Placement: Perspectives of Lesbian, Gay, and Heterosexual Parents.

Authors:  Rachel H Farr; Abbie E Goldberg
Journal:  Adopt Q       Date:  2014-02-28

5.  Tech-Mediated and Traditional Communication Modes in Adult Adoptees' Contact With Birth Parents.

Authors:  Krystal K Cashen; Harold D Grotevant; Adeline Wyman Battalen; Christina M Sellers; Ruth G McRoy
Journal:  Fam Relat       Date:  2020-07-28
  5 in total

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