This book looks at the simultaneous processes of making and un-making of
families that are part of the adoption practice. Whereas most studies on
transnational adoption concentrate on the adoptive family, the author
identifies not only the happy occasion when a family gains a child, but
also the sorrow and loss of the child to its family of origin. Situating
transnational adoption in the context of the Global North-South divide,
Hogbacka investigates the devastating effects of unequal life chances
and asymmetrical power relations on the adoption process and on the
mothers whose children are adopted. Based on unique primary material
gathered in in-depth interviews with South African families of origin
and Finnish adoptive families, the book investigates the decision-making
processes of both sets of parents and the encounters between them. The
first mothers' narratives are juxtaposed with those of the adopters and
of the adoption social workers who act on the principles of the wider
adoption system. Concluding with a critique of the Global Northism that
exemplifies current practices, Hogbacka sketches the contours of a more
just approach to transnational adoption that would shatter rather than
perpetuate inequality. The book can also be read as an expose of the
consequences of current inequalities for poor families. Global Families,
Inequality and Transnational Adoption will be of interest to students
and scholars of adoption studies, family and kinship, sociology,
anthropology, social work and development.