Guidelines for dealing with issues
raised by the sealed adoption record controversy are needed by the
field of adoption and do not now exist. . .
In 1917, the first state adoption law providing safeguards to protect
the adoptive process and the adopted child was passed in Minnesota.
This law provided for, among other things, the protection of court
records from public inspection and the revision of birth certificates.
Gradually, other states began to follow suit until today all states
have adoption laws that safeguard the adoption and the child, and
nearly all states number among the safeguards the sealing of adoption
records.
The emphasis on protection of the adoption and of the interests
of the child and the guidelines for implementing these principles
were derived largely from the adoption agencies that emerged during
the 1920s, ‘30s, and ‘40s. These agencies, in turn,
were greatly aided and influenced by the United States Children’s
Bureau and the Child Welfare League of America. In 1938, the Child
Welfare League issued a set of minimum safeguards for adoptions.
These included the provisions that the birth record be revised to
shield an adopted child from unnecessary embarrassment in the case
of illegitimacy and that the identity of the adopting parents be
kept from the natural parents.
The field of adoptions was growing and practice was evolving so
rapidly that in 1948, 1951, and 1954, the Child Welfare League conducted
nationwide surveys and workshops on adoption practices. In 1959,
the first CWLA Standards for Adoption Service, developed by an interdisciplinary
committee, was published by CWLA. The anonymity of all parties,
the confidentiality of agency records and of the adoption proceedings,
and the sealing of court adoption records and original birth certificates
were all supported in that document and reaffirmed in 1968, the
date of the most recent revision of the adoption standards.
These principles are based on the assumption that intervention
of the natural parents after the child’s adoption is not conducive
to the child’s well-being or to development of the new parent-child
relationship. They assume also that the natural parents, having
relinquished parental rights and responsibilities, should be free
to pursue their own lives without fear of intrusion by the relinquished
child or the adoptive parents. . .
Adoption agencies have long stressed the importance of telling
children they were adopted, of not trying to preserve a family secret
that would slip out in some sudden, harmful way. The Standards encourage
the agency to furnish the adoptive parents information needed to
understand the child and to deal with the child’s curiosity
about his natural parents. It was not anticipated that learning
of one’s adoptive status would lead to a desire to meet one’s
natural parents. It was assumed that a loving adoptive home would
answer a child’s need for identity and security and that involvement
with the natural family might jeopardize that identity and security.
Furthermore, in past years the typical adoptee was an infant born
out of wedlock to a young woman, who, in the context of societal
disapproval, did not want this fact known. Again, it was not anticipated
that the mother might wish to have contact with the relinquished
child at a later point.
But times have changed. The basic assumptions underlying the guarantees
of anonymity and confidentiality are undergoing challenge from both
legal and psychological perspectives. . .
Many adoptees and others claim that, regardless of their reasons
and regardless of the outcome, they have a right to know the full
details of their past, including the identity of their natural parents.
There is a groundswell of support for this position. The media
have embraced it. New legislation has been or is being proposed
in many states. Court cases including class action suits seeking
to strike down laws that seal the records or birth certificates
are in process. In our society greater emphasis than in the past
is being placed on the right of all people to know the contents
of various records kept about them and on the civil rights of previously
overlooked groups. All of these factors make the time ripe for a
reexamination of earlier established policies and practices. . .
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