Complex Adoption and Assisted Reproductive Technology - Isabel H. Paret, Vivian B. Shapiro

Complex Adoption and Assisted Reproductive Technology

A Developmental Approach to Clinical Practice
Buch | Hardcover
338 Seiten
2001
Guilford Publications (Verlag)
978-1-57230-628-8 (ISBN)
44,85 inkl. MwSt
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This volume addresses the special set of issues that arise in therapeutic work with parents and children in families formed through complex adoption and assisted reproductive technology (ART).
New pathways to parenthood are being traveled by growing numbers of couples and single adults, including many who face medical and social barriers to having children. From a psychological standpoint, families formed by complex adoption and assisted reproductive technology (ART) are first and foremost just that--families. Yet they also face a unique array of issues and challenges that may be clarified and resolved in the therapeutic setting. This much-needed book provides a deeper understanding of the ways that complex adoption and ART shape the life experience of children and parents, identifying important areas and methods for assessment and treatment. Combining developmental and ecological research with in-depth case material, the book establishes an integrative framework for clinical practice.

The authors draw upon knowledge and skills gained from working in a variety of new family contexts. In the area of adoption, many new options have evolved that differ from traditional practices of adoption at birth. Thousands of older children in foster and institutional care in the United States and abroad are awaiting permanent placements. Open adoption, kinship adoption, and transracial adoption are also transforming family life, as is the use of ART, which raises significant issues of family identity and family process. The book explores such key themes as the significance of early experience, the capacity to recover from exposure to trauma, the impact of heredity and the difference that environment can make, and the centrality of primary attachment relationships. Also discussed are the impact of bias and other issues affecting families of difference, including lesbian and gay families. Concluding chapters consider promising future directions for training and research.

This is an important resource for social workers, family therapists, clinical psychologists, psychiatrists, and other professionals working with children and families, as well as researchers and students in these fields. It will serve as a text in advanced undergraduate and graduate-level courses.

Vivian B. Shapiro, PhD, is Emeritus Professor of Social Work at the University of Michigan. Dr. Shapiro helped found the Infant Mental Health Association in Michigan, and is in practice in Princeton, New Jersey. Her research and publications have focused on the treatment of children at risk and the use of narrative theory in practice with nontraditional families. Her current clinical work includes treatment of children in international and complex adoption. Janet R. Shapiro, MSW, PhD, is Assistant Professor and Alexandra Grange Hawkins Lecturer at the Bryn Mawr College Graduate School of Social Work and Social Research. Dr. Shapiro's teaching, clinical work, and research have focused on the translation of developmental theory to practice with special populations of children and families. A particular focus of her work is social and emotional development in infancy and early childhood, with special emphasis on relational development in atypical populations. Isabel H. Paret, PhD, is Clinical Associate Professor in the Department of Psychiatry at Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, UMDNJ, and supervises at the Graduate School of Applied Professional Psychology, Rutgers University. Dr. Paret is a member of the executive council of the Association for Child Psychoanalysis, Inc., and a board member of the New Jersey Association for Infant Mental Health. She is in private practice in Princeton, New Jersey, and has published in the clinical literature.

I. New Family Narratives: An Approach to Practice
1. A Conceptual Framework for Practice
2. Developmental Perspectives and Clinical Issues in Complex Adoption
II. Complex Adoption
3. The Adoption of Children Following Foster Placement
4. The Impact of Delayed Adoption: A Case Study
5. International Adoption and Family Formation
6. Skipped-Generation Kinship Care: Grandparents and Their Grandchildren
7. Open Adoption: Family Attachments and Identity Formation
III. Assisted Reproductive Technology and Family Formation
8. Social and Scientific Changes in the Formation of Families
9. Family Identity and Emerging Psychological Issues
10. Single, Gay, and Lesbian Parents: New Family Perspectives
IV. Implications for Practice, Training, and Research
11. A Clinical Look at Knowing and Telling: Secrets, Lies, and Disillusionments, Marsha H. Levy-Warren
12. New Forms of Parentage: Implications for Practice, Training, and Research

Erscheint lt. Verlag 3.5.2001
Reihe/Serie Clinical Practice with Children, Adolescents, and Families
Verlagsort New York
Sprache englisch
Maße 152 x 229 mm
Themenwelt Studium 1. Studienabschnitt (Vorklinik) Histologie / Embryologie
Sozialwissenschaften Soziologie Mikrosoziologie
ISBN-10 1-57230-628-9 / 1572306289
ISBN-13 978-1-57230-628-8 / 9781572306288
Zustand Neuware
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