Friday, September 25, 2009

China Re-thinking One-Child Policy as the Population Ages

A story from The TimesOnline - http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/asia/article6841430.ece

Call for more babies as China turns to grey
Michael Sheridan in Shanghai


WHEN the head of family planning in Shanghai said young couples should have more babies because the city was growing old, it sounded like a statement of the obvious.
Yet within days there was a storm of comment on the internet and in state media as people asked whether this meant the government was preparing to relax its one-child policy.
There are signs officials are rethinking the ban, which has prevented 400m births since 1979, because on present trends China’s population will begin to decline by the middle of the century. By then, India will have overtaken it as the most populous nation.
Xie Lingli, the Shanghai family planning official, was forced to explain publicly that he had not deviated from the party line, which restricts most couples in Chinese cities to one child.
The rules allow couples who are both only-children to have two babies. Shanghai has introduced other exceptions, including more leeway for fishermen and farmers. It has also abolished a rule that couples who are allowed more than one child must wait four years between births.
“There’s a huge social demand for second children,” said Yang Henmin, an engineer in Shanghai. “In the end the government cannot control it any more than it can grasp the wind.”
The city’s family planners talk of “encouraging” more births in a change of tone that sounds distinctly like liberalisation by stealth.
“In the past we stressed birth control, not the chance to have a second child. Not many people know these exceptions to the regulations so we were just reminding them,” said Xie.
There are few babies to be seen on the streets of China’s commercial capital. The city is ageing so quickly that by 2020 more than a third of its 19m people will be 60 or over. The city’s pension fund faces bankruptcy.
It is a harbinger of change that will come as a shock to some commentators who portray China as a youthful country that is destined to rule the world. In fact, the one-child policy means China is “greying” fast. On present trends it will grow old before it has a chance to get rich.
Although China’s population has passed 1.3 billion and is still growing, it is expected to peak within three decades. By 2040, India will have 1.5 billion people versus 1.42 billion Chinese, according to Barbara Pillsbury, an expert on population control.
The Chinese media reported her forecast and the Shanghai debate shows that officials have begun to grasp the consequences of the policy.
By the middle of the century China will have more than 330m people over 60, of whom 100m will be over 80. In contrast, the US is predicted to have a younger population because of immigration and higher birth rates.
“We say that four, two, one — that’s four grandparents, two parents and one child — is the usual family structure in Shanghai,” said Tan Jie, a businessman, “so the burden of care is a heavy one.”
Then there is the gender imbalance. Pillsbury said that while the average live birth ratio is 105 boys to 100 girls, in China it is 119 to 100 — the result of abortions by couples desperate for a son.
In Mao Tse-tung’s time, the average Chinese woman had six children. Today she has 1.8. In the past, there were six younger people working to support each old person. In the one-child generation, said Pillsbury, there would be one couple to support each one.
“The figures are getting close to those in Japan and Sweden,” wrote the China Youth Daily, “so Shanghai’s intentions should be praised, but its methods are wrong.”
The newspaper warned that if other provinces did the same, the “strain on society” would be immense. “The government should not ask or encourage people to have another child; families should make the decision,” it said.
Its line seemed to suggest that a cautious debate about relaxing the policy has reached the upper echelons of the Communist party.
“China accounted for 40% of the world’s population in the Qianlong period of the Qing dynasty, but today it accounts for 20%,” said Wang Xinhai, a social scientist. “So China should encourage people to have even three children,” he said.
Chinese officials are defensive about a widespread misconception that the one-child limit is imposed on every couple. In the countryside, people may have a second child if their first is a girl, or disabled. No restrictions apply to China’s minorities, including Tibetans and Uighur Muslims.
But Shanghai, which was the first modern city in China, is keeping up its pioneering role. Five other provinces have followed its lead by relaxing the rule requiring four years between births. A historic change of policy may be in the early stages of gestation.

Law Makers in Vietnam Discuss Child Adoption by Foreigners

Under current procedures, adoption centers can take on three roles simultaneously: receiving and caring for children; receiving humanitarian donations from individuals and organizations; and introducing children to potential adoptive parents. However, the reality has proved that such a process is likely to lead to negative actions. For example, preference is often given to those who donate more money. To improve the situation, the bill suggested that the Ministry of Justice be in charge of introducing children for adoption by foreigners. “That introduction is a step of the process of adoption and should be controlled by a State agency. It is most reasonable that the task should be assigned to the Department of International Adoption under the Ministry of Justice,” Deputy Minister of Justice Dinh Trung Tung said at the meeting. "There remains a trend of running after benefits in the introduction of children for adoption by foreigners,” he added. Meanwhile, the chairman of the NA Law Committee, Nguyen Van Thuan, said that such an assignment is not in accordance with the ministry’s state management function. The ministry should only play the role of an effective inspector and the introduction of adoption should be taken on by social organizations, he recommended. Agreeing that priority must be given to protecting adopted children’s rights and interests, some members of the NA Standing Committee demand a regulation that children nine-years-old upward have the right to select who will adopt them. The draft law should adopt a regulation on suitable conditions through which such children can voice their opinions, the chairman of the NA Committee for Culture, Education, Youth and Children, Dao Trong Thi, said. The Ministry of Justice said that the bill is based on the concept that priority is given to local people and then adoption by foreigners as the last resort. The draft law also extends the time limit for finding domestic families to adopt orphans and other needy children from 30 to 90 days before they are put up for adoption by foreigners, the ministry said. According to preliminary statistics, during the past five years, more than 20,000 children nationwide were adopted, 13,000 by Vietnamese and the remainder by foreigners.

By A. Phuong – Translated by Truc Thinh
http://www.saigon-gpdaily.com.vn/National/2009/9/74315/#

Friday, September 18, 2009

Feds give Florida $9.75 million for foster-child adoptions

As reported by Kate Santich in the Orlando Sentinel:

Florida's efforts to increase adoption rates for foster children has earned the state a $9.75 million incentive bonus from the federal government -- more than a quarter of the money awarded nationwide."
Florida has embraced a never-give-up attitude about finding families to adopt children in foster care," George Sheldon, secretary of the Florida Department of Children and Families, said Thursday. "Even in tough economic times, people want to adopt the children most in need of safe, loving homes."
For two years in a row, record numbers of foster children have been adopted in Florida -- 3,777 kids during the past fiscal year and 3,674 the year before. There are roughly 1,000 foster children now available for adoption. The effort has been a priority of Gov. Charlie Crist, who helped launch an "Explore Adoption" public-awareness campaign spotlighting the importance of finding "forever families" for foster kids. That effort includes a Web site -- adoptflorida.org -- where prospective parents can read profiles and view photos of children available for adoption. In addition, the department earlier this year initiated a "Longest Waiting Teens" project to help find permanent homes for older kids who had languished for years as wards of the state.

Already, 25 of the 103 foster kids identified for that program have been adopted -- including 16-year-old Dalton Rosenberg, who now lives in Ocoee. His adoption was final July 1."We're supposed to be together. It's probably the greatest thing I've ever done," said Theresa Rosenberg, who had adopted another teen from foster care before Dalton and has two biological children. "They're just as needy and loving as other kids." In all, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services awarded $35 million in adoption-incentive bonuses to 38 states and Puerto Rico. In Florida, the money will go primarily to support adoption subsidies, which help ease the financial responsibilities of adoptive families.
http://www.orlandosentinel.com/features/orl-foster-care-bonus-091709,0,1601733.story

Wednesday, September 16, 2009

Should Single Christians Adopt?


A blog post by Julia Duin from Her.Meneutics, Christianity Today Blog for Women - http://blog.christianitytoday.com/women/2009/09/adoption_single_christians_nee.html
Adoption: Single Christians Need Not Apply
When there are 132 million orphans in the world, should unmarrieds really be discouraged from reaching out to them?

National Adoption Month is coming up, and churches are mobilizing like never before to encourage people to adopt. But there is a secret underneath it all: Single Christians need not apply.
When I was considering adopting my daughter, one of the most disheartening things was the active discouragement of many Christians who told me point-blank that only married couples should adopt. It was bad enough, I thought, to be consigned to a life of singleness because of the lack of unmarried men in church. For people to say singles are unworthy to adopt a child who would otherwise be living in an orphanage boggled my mind.
The other day, I received a copy of SBC Life, the Southern Baptist Convention’s denominational magazine, where I saw David Roach’s piece “Adoption Ministries Thriving in SBC Churches.” First, the good: It pointed out how any church, large or small, can be involved in adoption ministry toward those who want to adopt, how scandalous it is how many orphans are in this world, and that it’s up to Christians to do something about it. I was gratified to learn of a few loan programs out there for those wishing to adopt, as the costs — especially for international adoption — usually climb well past $30,000. It was also refreshing to see how many parents were supporting interracial adoption. And it providing some good ideas for preparing for November 8, which is Orphan Sunday.

All the photos and the pronouns used in the article, however, referred to couples. This was true on some of the related websites, such as Highview Baptist Church in Louisville, where I found no mention that some of the adoptive parents might be single men or women. This was certainly true on the application forms attached to these sites. I e-mailed Highview's adoption ministry director about this, and she was not aware of any singles adoptions there. “The leadership of Highview believes that it is the best for children to be adopted into traditional homes with a father and a mother,” she told me.

I also e-mailed another member of Highview, Russell Moore, senior vice president at Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, dean of its school of theology, and author most recently of Adopted for Life. I asked him about his stance on single adoptions, and he wouldn’t say what that might be. He just said the answer was in his new book, which he said he'd be glad to send to me. It arrived, and over the weekend, and I found one sentence addressing my concern: “Generally speaking, if you are single, pray for a marriage before you seek children.”

Well, of course. But what if God does not answer someone's prayers for marriage?
I clicked on TogetherforAdoption.org, regarding an adoption conference slated for October 2-3 at Christ Community Church in Franklin, Tennessee. The main speakers were married men. Female speakers were assigned to the break-out sessions, but there was nothing there for singles. It seems that in the organizers' minds, we are disqualified from parenthood.

About a year ago, I was talking with a publisher about ideas for books, and I mentioned my interest in writing something to encourage single adoptive parents in the evangelical world. The emerging adoption movement is so focused on couples, I thought an alternative voice was needed. That idea lasted two seconds. I was told the book would be too niche, that no one would read it, and that no evangelical publisher would print it.

Christian groups report that there are 132 million orphans in this world. If so, every available resource needs to be freed up to care for these children — meaning singles as well as couples. There are 100 million single persons over 18 in the United States alone — one-third of the population. I think it’s safe to estimate that at least a third of all adults in a typical U.S. church are single. Why is it verboten to mobilize the unmarried so they too can nourish and bring up children?

I’m not picking just on the Southern Baptists. Several years ago, I was interviewing a professor at a Catholic college who also told me singles should not adopt. In fact, he said, children would be better off staying at orphanages than being adopted by a single mom or dad. I was speechless. I have seen the conditions of orphanages in Iraq, Kazakhstan, and India. What sane person would want a child to grow up in one of those? When I see Christian adoption activists ignore singles, I conclude, sadly, that despite their rhetoric, they are not fully committed to doing what it takes to make sure every child gets a home.

Reminder: Together for Adoption Conference 2009


Join the 400 people who have already registered for Together for Adoption Conference 2009 at Christ Community Church (Franklin, TN) on October 2-3. The uniqueness of T4A’s conferences is that they focus primarily on vertical adoption (i.e., God adopting us in Christ), with a secondary and necessary focus on its profound implications for orphan care and horizontal adoption (i.e., couples adopting children). With over 132 million orphaned and vulnerable children in the world, what our world needs is Christians who have been freshly gripped by the stunning vertical reality of their adoption by God. If anything can mobilize the church to address our world’s orphan crises, it will be the good news of vertical adoption. Join us as we seek to connect the dots between our adoption by God and the adoption of children.
REGISTRATION IS OPEN.
Conference page for Together for Adoption Conference 2009 Nashville: http://www.togetherforadoption.org/?page_id=11
Worship will be led by Kevin Twit of Indelible Grace (http://www.igracemusic.com/).
Check out our new T4A video. It connects the glory of the gospel (i.e., the treasure that Jesus is) with the global orphan crisis: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sCK8dMoErRA

News from China Center of Adoption Affairs

Issued by the Joint Council on International Children's Services:

"During a meeting with the China Center of Adoption Affairs (CCAA) on Tuesday, September 15, 2009, Director General Lu announced that beginning December 1, 2009, all adoptive families must be registered with a Hague Accredited Adoption Service Provider (ASP). If an adoptive family is currently registered with a non-Accredited ASP, they are required to transfer their adoption to a Hague Accredited ASP no later than December 1, 2009. Director General Lu also clarified: families currently using the I-600A and I-600 process (non-Hague) may continue with this process. Families are not required to transfer to the I-800A and I-800 process, unless deemed necessary by the United State Government."

Tuesday, September 15, 2009

Philippine Politician Pushing for Simpler Child Adoption Laws

MANILA - The Philippines needs simpler laws for potential parents who want to adopt orphans and neglected children, Senate Minority Leader Aquilino Pimentel Jr. said on Tuesday
Pimentel said he is drafting a bill that prescribes new ways of alternative child care and will consolidate all laws on domestic adoption and inter-country adoption, foster care and guardianship of children.
He said the bill, entitled “The Alternative Child Care Code of 2009,” seeks the establishment of the National Child Welfare Authority (NCWA) that will be responsible for implementing all laws relevant to alternative child care in the country.

Continue story at: http://www.abs-cbnnews.com/nation/metro-manila/08/18/09/simpler-child-adoption-laws-pushed