|   We have had considerable experience 
              at the Dight Institute in working with adoption agencies in the 
              placement of children of mixed racial ancestry. Mrs. Esther Nordlie 
              and I have just completed a follow-up of the results of the placement 
              of such children and will summarize the results here, as this is 
              the first study of its kind. It is probable that genetic counselors 
              will be increasingly occupied with this topic as interracial unions 
              are likely to continue in the United States. The casual unions often 
              result in children who become available for adoption. . . . 
            The problem of placing “pure” Negro, Indian or Mexican 
              children is difficult only because few families of these minority 
              groups request children for adoption. Ordinarily, no attempt would 
              be made to place these babies in Caucasian families as the child 
              or the adoptive parents would probably find social adjustment too 
              difficult. However, children of mixed racial origin may “pass 
              for white” or resemble the Caucasian adoptive parents sufficiently 
              so that placement in a white family is feasible. Such placement 
              is desirable for the child as the socioeconomic environment is assumed 
              to be more favorable there. This would be true only if the racial 
              appearance of the child would permit acceptance in the white community. 
              Many white couples are desperately anxious to adopt children. Some 
              are sufficiently free from racial prejudices to be able to adopt 
              children of mixed racial ancestry, if a reasonable “match” 
              between child and adoptive parents can be made. The critical prediction 
              rests with the geneticist (or anthropologist) who must project the 
              appearance of a small baby ahead to the child of five or six when 
              entering school. . . . 
            One would suppose that predicting the chances for a child to “pass 
              for white” would be quite simple. Such, however, is not the 
              case. The main difficulty is that these traits, when present in 
              the racial hybrid, may not be apparent in an infant but develop 
              over the years. Hair texture and skin color are the most important 
              traits and at the same time the most difficult to predict. The baby 
              may have no hair; it is well known that babies with considerable 
              Negro ancestry may look quite light at birth and darken considerably 
              during childhood. The geneticist is thus vulnerable to mistakes 
              in his predictions as to the future appearance of the baby. One 
              could take the attitude that unless the geneticist can make his 
              prediction with certainty he should not enter the picture at all. 
              Such reasoning is absurd. The baby is in the custody of the adoption 
              agency and the agency must make some provision for this child.  |