Title
Tradeoffs in Formulating a Consistent National Policy on Adoption
Abstract
Just as the courts must consider the tradeoff between the best interest of the child and parental rights in involuntary termination of parental rights, policy on international adoption must consider the tradeoffs between the best interest of the child and the long-term interests of the nation. We argue that countries that suspend international adoptions do not maximize social welfare. A consistent national policy to maximize the well-being of the children and society at large would be to devote resources today to the oversight of international adoption in accord with child protections under the Hague Convention, while at the same time developing a domestic system of care that provides for the physical and developmental needs of orphaned children in the context of permanent families.
Disciplines
Economics | Family Law | Juvenile Law | Law and Economics | Law and Society | Social Welfare Law
Date of this Version
November 2006
Recommended Citation
Mary Eschelbach Hansen and Daniel Pollack, "Tradeoffs in Formulating a Consistent National Policy on Adoption" (November 21, 2006). bepress Legal Series. bepress Legal Series.Working Paper 1881.
https://law.bepress.com/expresso/eps/1881