Category Archives: homelessness

Save the Children?


Patricia J. Williams | December 2, 2010

‘Twas well after midnight when I came across some morsels of advice from the Ontario-based website familyadoptionplan.com. Under the listed advantages of international adoption is the proposition that “it allows adoptive parents to be matched with children that share their ethnic heritage…. It also allows socially conscious couples to bring a child into a much more advantageous and privileged living situation than would be possible in the child’s country of birth.”

Contrast that with the site’s description of domestic adoption: “One major drawback is that there is no guarantee that the child you want will end up being placed with you. Public adoption agencies serve the interests of the child, not the parents, and will always place the child in the situation they feel is best for him or her…. You must also accept that many children waiting to be placed…come from difficult backgrounds and may have been emotionally, psychologically, physically or sexually abused. Developmental delays and medical conditions…[are] a risk you have to assume as a prospective parent of a domestically adopted child.”

I spend a good bit of my professional life studying the ethics of adoption, and familyadoptionplan.com is hardly alone in its assumptions. There are at least 18.5 million children worldwide who have lost both parents, and their plight is largely shaped by North American parenting preferences. From the rushed airlifts of Vietnamese, Korean and Haitian babies (some who later turn out not to be orphans at all), to the rage for Chinese girls, to Madonna’s splendiferous beneficence—popular culture too often interprets international adoption through the lens of a “first world rescues third world innocents” narrative. What’s missing from this tidy plot is sensitivity to the social disruptions that render so many children homeless to begin with. Here are some thoughts about how to rechannel this mythology.

First, it would be helpful not to disaggregate international adoption from domestic (American) adoption. For example, there is a misperception that there’s a “baby shortage” in the United States. This is true only if one modifies the term to mean “healthy white newborns.” There are tens of thousands of adoptable domestic children of color. The silence about their plight allows many to imagine (a) that American adoption practices are irreproachably race-neutral; (b) that all children in the developed world are better off than anyplace else in the world (when, in fact, we have just about the highest infant mortality rate of any industrialized nation); and (c) that our culture of adoption is unassailably moral.

The plight of homeless children in war-torn or poverty-stricken places is surely heartbreaking. And relatively speaking, children in the industrialized West are many times better off than the average child in Sierra Leone. But let’s not confuse “helping” global crises with the individual decision to adopt a child. We have an international crisis of child protection; but that’s not something that adoption alone, or even primarily, can fix. It’s just not a great idea to adopt a child because you want to end war or cure world hunger. Maybe you should work for an NGO instead or help plow a field. Such efforts are often undervalued, but they contribute significantly to the betterment of dispossessed children.

To posit adoption as “rescue” from turmoil risks inflecting the personal family dynamic with missionary smugness in a way no child should be asked to endure. For example, if you adopt your nephew and raise that child with the message that you are Mother Teresa for having taken him in and that he’s ever so lucky to have been rescued from sluttish “Aunt Sally”… Well, it’s got to be hard for a kid not to feel ambivalent about the part of himself that is born of Aunt Sally. Similarly, in many international and interracial adoptions, kids are raised to look down on their origins and “feel lucky”—to their documented distress.

Furthermore, adoption has become a form of trafficking in and of itself. The exchange of money, though facilitated by public policy, is particularly evident in the private adoption context. This commodification allows too many to think it is appropriate to “return” adopted children when problems arise, like so many damaged goods.

One can also observe here a fluctuating eugenic value system. If China values boys over girls, Americans choose girls over boys, no matter where they’re from. Color-ism and fad figure prominently in this perverse ranking, with prospective parents seeking kids from Eastern Europe, Africa and South Asia according to cultural images about who is more “like” whom, who is “born smart,” who is prettier, who “exotic.” But Angelina Jolie’s influence notwithstanding, the day-to-day discomfort we have talking about race and ethnicity ultimately leads to the conclusion that a healthy domestic black child must be harder to live with than a catatonic child from a Romanian orphanage.

Finally, the issue of international adoption needs to be examined alongside the developing market for assisted reproduction. More women are seeking in vitro fertilization or are using surrogates (often dark-skinned surrogates in the third world). Assisted reproduction is a well-funded industry that thrives on the idea that family is biological, or that women who are “desperate” to have children can do so only through “their own” eggs or, even better, “designer eggs.”

In truth there is a “wealth,” not a shortage, of children who need homes. Yet we seem to be narrowly rebiologizing “family” precisely at a moment when we should embrace our common humanity. Without a basic assumption that all the world’s children are “our own,” we’ll never get past that unspoken sense of exoticism and boundary that fuels consumerism and neglect in the social sphere—or solipsism and disappointment in the personal.


 

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Filed under adoption, biotechnology, family, gender, genetics, homelessness, race, gender, class, ethnicity

Convergences

by Patricia J. Williams

Released: 26 Feb 2010

Train stations are a great place from which to survey the world of this wintry economic landscape. Ever-increasing numbers of Americans gather in their shelter, the well-heeled to avoid airline delays, the homeless for their warmth. Train stations are some of the few places left in America where a full spectrum of citizens — rich, poor, high, low — sit side by side, cheek by jowl.

Last week I had to go from Washington to Boston. I settled in to wait at Gate J of Union Station with my knitting and a book of crossword puzzles. A woman who had seemingly donned everything she owns sat down two seats away from me. She was wearing a linty black knit cap drawn over short dreadlocks, an oversize stained sweatshirt and baggy maroon trousers. She carried several smudged and well-worn shopping bags, which she arranged in a semicircle at her feet, and she began talking to them, commiserating about the terrible state of the world. Her tone was gentle, conversational, light. At first I thought she was speaking on a cellphone — there were polite pauses in what she said, moments of agreement and playfulness — but in fact she was not. She mourned the loss of democratic process in the Senate, the rise of mercenary armies and agribusiness as well as the concentration of corporate power in the manufacture of butter and detergents. (“It looks like there are a thousand brands on the shelves, but in fact they’re all owned by one or two multinationals.”) She feared the social consequences of the financial crisis: “Things that should protect our economy… the Robinson-Patman Act… They’re so busy undoing that — that undoing will be our undoing…”

Genius? Insanity? Either way, her observations threw me for a loop — they were illuminating, mesmerizing, shocking, dislocating. I dug my iPhone from my bag and Googled the Robinson-Patman Act. In some other universe, I used to know what it said. As the tiny blue screen fluttered and winked to life in its search for meaning, I gazed about the waiting area of Gate J. Nearly everyone was similarly engaged with their cyberspacial phylacteries, davening into thin air, entranced, uttering streams of words that echoed in the high-domed space like a turbulent waterfall. Unlike the woman next to me, however, they all seemed to be deploying visible Bluetooth devices or earplugs affixed to their heads, their eyes flat, inwardly transfixed.

Fifteen years ago, I suppose, the place would have seemed like a ward at Bellevue. A well-dressed man across from me was enunciating loudly about having to reschedule a game of handball. A woman with a messily overstuffed briefcase had her head cocked like an eager spaniel’s in order to keep her phone tucked in the hollow between shoulder and neck; she murmured over and over, “Uh-huh… uh-huh… uh-huh… uh-huh,” like a series of involuntary spasms. A college student in a porkpie hat congratulated a friend on his recent engagement and promised to throw him a bachelor party with lots of “juicy, big-lipped prostitutes, dude.” A guy in a hoodie and mud-spattered Timberland boots was waxing lively about “some people” who don’t want to “move their fat butts and work.” Not on a cellphone was the exception — a wiry child of about 10 with alarming, much too bright eyes, darting up and down the aisles seeking “a dollar for food.”

Fifteen years ago, it was still springtime in America. The thought of a recession as deep as ours crossed few minds outside the more perspicacious — some said paranoid — quadrants of academia and, of course, the perpetually redlined limits of inner cities. In contrast, the present-day waiting room at Union Station was ablaze with the semaphores of legitimacy, exhaustion, the absurd. My head spun with fatigue and the roaring heteroglossia. Next to me, the woman in the linty hat was telling the same story over and over: she moved so fluently among the disappointments of commerce, politics, law enforcement and grammatical apocalypse (“You need to end that sentence with a question mark, young lady!”). I struggled to track the coherence in her constantly disrupted narrative. An amiable security guard strolled by. He nudged at the woman’s circle of bags with his shoe and told her to move along. She gathered her belongings, the flow of her words never ceasing. There was a particularly intriguing riff about the police having killed her, followed by a soft, wise little laugh: “But you can’t let your kin kill you either.” Then, still addressing the epistemic gatekeeper within, she offered shyly, “You are very well liked.” “Thanks,” she responded brightly and shuffled off.

The District of Columbia suffers the highest percentage of homelessness in the nation. African-Americans, veterans and the mentally ill are disproportionately represented among their ranks. As the foreclosure crisis spreads, incrementally leveling this unfortunate playing field, non-African-Americans, nonveterans and the certifiably sane struggle madly to distinguish themselves from the usual narratives of poverty: laziness, lack of qualifications, bad choices. A determined dis-identification with the already internally displaced has edged into our national parlance, with a host of predictable resentments. The possibility that we, the broad collective of people, are sinking into a communal financial ooze is underestimated, rationalized as the fault of the ones who sank first. From Fox News to the blogosphere, such analysis focuses on blaming those on the bottom for being too heavy, weighing too much and generally dragging the rest down.

In Madness and Civilization, Foucault wrote, “If, now, we try to assign a value, in and of itself, outside its relations with the dream and with error, to classical unreason, we must understand it not as reason diseased, or as reason lost or alienated, but quite simply as reason dazzled.” By the same token, the failure to see our common fate defines a dangerously bedazzling split between spirit and logic; between poetry and engineering; between the messiness of mercy and, ultimately, the orderliness of law.

Copyright © 2010 The Nation, distributed by Agence Global

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Filed under homelessness, madness and civilization, poverty, race, gender, class, ethnicity, recession, subprime mortgages