Saturday, January 3, 2009
By ELLEN ULLMAN
Published: January 1, 2009
The New York TImes
(Original Story)
I AM not adopted; I have mysterious origins.
I have said that sentence many times in the course of my life as an adopted person. I like it so much I put it into the mouth of a character in the novel I’m writing. The character and I are both fond of the idea. We can think of ourselves as living in the dense pages of 19th-century fiction, where one’s origins — the exact mother and father — are not nearly as important as one’s “circumstances.”
(Continued)
Wednesday, November 5, 2008
(this is an early draft of an article which appeared in the New Palgrave Dictionary of Law and Economics)
by John Palmer / The University of Western Ontario
(Original Story)
The adoption of a child by non-biological parents is the transfer of a limited property right. To understand an economics-and-law analysis of adoption, one must first examine the nature of this property right. Then the conditions of exchange can be studied and assessed.The property right that is being exchanged is a parenthood right — the right to take on the rights and obligations that accompany parenting a child. These rights are limited by governments in many different ways. One may not buy and sell these rights, one may not readily dispose of one’s “property”, nor may one indiscriminately cause harm to the property. Also, one must provide food, clothing, shelter, and education for the property. These limitations have been imposed upon the owners of all such property in the class, whether the property right was acquired biologically or via exchange.
Changing Supply Conditions
Through the first half of the twentieth century, into the 1950s, the primary issue in adoption was finding acceptable homes for children, including adoptable infants born out of wedlock. Beginning in the 1960s, though, shortages of normal healthy infants emerged. This dramatic shift in the supply and demand conditions has been related to many concurrent shifts in relative prices, technology and tastes. Certainly one of the major determinants of the reduced supply of parenthood rights for adoptable infants has been the falling birth rates themselves, throughout the entire populations (and not just among unwed mothers) of industrialized countries. This decline in birth rates has been related to rises in the labour force participation rates of females and to lower-cost and more reliable birth control technologies (see Medoff 1993).
(Continued)