What constitutes a family? Tracing the dramatic evolution of Americans’ answer to this question over the past century, Kinship by Design provides the fullest account to date of modern adoption’s history. Beginning in the early 1900s, when children were still transferred between households by a variety of unregulated private arrangements, Ellen Herman details efforts by the U.S. Children’s Bureau and the Child Welfare League of America to establish adoption standards in law and practice. She goes on to trace Americans’ shifting ideas about matching children with physically or intellectually similar parents, revealing how research in developmental science and technology shaped adoption as it navigated the nature-nurture debate. Concluding with an insightful analysis of the revolution that ushered in special needs, transracial, and international adoptions, Kinship by Design ultimately situates the practice as both a different way to make a family and a universal story about love, loss, identity, and belonging. In doing so, this volume provides a new vantage point from which to view twentieth-century America, revealing as much about social welfare, statecraft, and science as it does about childhood, family, and private life.
Through experiments, ?design therapy? and alternative methods, this book tells the story about the experimental design project The Kinship Method, that took place 2018 to 2019.0Five designers are challenged to break patterns in order to ...
Herman, Kinship by Design, 134–154; and Melosh, Strangers and Kin, 36–43. Balcom, Traffic in Babies, 197; Briggs, Somebody's Children, 34–35; and Herman, Kinship by Design, 229–238. Solinger, Wake Up Little Susie, 24–25 and 148–204; ...
In this deeply felt, bridge-building book, Philippe Wamba, the son of an African American mother and a Congolese father, uses his fascinating personal background as a lens through which to...
This , bluntly stated by Leach , was perhaps not so novel an idea as all that . Worseley had suggested something similar in his critique of the Tallensi material in 1956 ; and I had tentatively suggested the primacy of practical ...
This machinery – a defining feature of kinship by design – was institutionalised during the early twentieth century in the United States. In 1917 Minnesota passed the first law mandating that children's adoptability and prospective ...
This book offers to academic and general public readers timely reflections about our relationships to violence.
King, 439 Reimagining the American Pacific: From South Pacific to Bamboo Ridge and Beyond (Wilson), 24 Reinecke, John, 78, 308, 314, 315 Religious history, 360–72 affiliations, 360 future of religion and, 368 intellectual foundations of ...
These case studies therefore demonstrate how design and art can contribute to the creation of bonds of kinship. These bonds are strengthened through performative actions of care and affection carried out over time and contribute to the ...
Is there a universal language of love, a "kinship with all life" that can open new horizons of experience?
See , for example , B. Levinson , Pet Oriented Child Psychotherapy ( Springfield : Thomas , 1969 ) ; S. Corson and E. Corson , “ The Socializing Role of Pet Animals in Nursing Homes , ” in L. Levi , ed . , Society , Stress , and Disease ...