Twelve Things You Can Do to Make Sure Your Adoption is Ethical
Watching Beasts of the Southern Wild started me thinking about ethics 
in adoption. I know I wrote some hard things yesterday. If you're on this site, 
you probably want to have an ethical, kid-centered, health-building adoption. I 
want to be a part of making that happen.
Here are some of my gleanings from the online adoption community, and from my own practice as an adoption social worker - twelve things that you can do to make sure your adoption is an ethical one.
Here are twelve ways to make sure your adoption is an ethical one:
1. Ask your adoption agency how they find children who need to be adopted.
2. Ask what sort of counseling that they 
provide to the child’s first family. Is their counseling a balanced 
representation of all options geared at helping the person make the choice 
that’s best for them, or is it a one-sided “sales pitch”?
3. Ask whether they still extend full services 
to women who, after contact the agency, choose to parent their child – or, do 
they only provide services if the woman says she’ll relinquish, but only provide 
referrals if she decides to parent?
4. Ask how actively they pursue the involvement 
of the birth father. Do they seek his input and participation, or do they just 
do the legal minimum standard of notification and assure you that he “probably 
won’t show up.”?
5. Ask how thoroughly they train and assess 
adoptive parents.
6. Ask how they feel about openness. Do they 
speak of it as a wonderful commitment, or as something that adoptive parents can 
agree 
to, but then quickly change their minds on, once an adoption is finalized?  
Do Your Research 
7. Research the adoption practices in the 
country you’re considering adopting from. 
8. Research your agency – if they’re “for 
profit” their motivation might more easily be on the side of pleasing the 
adopting parent (and although that sounds good, it increases the risk of 
unethical treatment of the birth parents.) 
9. Speaking of that term, "birth parent" – does 
the agency use the post-adoption term “birth parents” for women who are still 
pregnant? That might communicate an expectation which makes it difficult for 
pregnant women and expectant fathers to feel like they have the freedom to make 
whichever choice they see as best. 
10. If your agency is non-profit, check out 
their profile on Guidestar.org and see where they get their funds from and what 
they do with them. If they’re for-profit, try to figure out how they avoid being 
driven by profits rather than by people’s real needs. Friends of mine who were 
considering adoption once told me of a for-profit agency that would have charged 
them around $25,000 up front, and which expressed a commitment to encouraging 
pregnant women to choose adoption once they’d expressed an interest in it. My 
friends ended up adopting through a different agency. They expressed that it 
“felt like the agency was more on the birth mother’s side than ours,” but that 
they were comfortable with that balance. It seemed healthier that way. 
11. Visit your agency’s website, and read the 
pages for adopting parents and for expectant parents. See if the message is 
consistent, or if they seem to say different things to different people.
12. Check out the Internet 
adoption community. There's lots of insight from all sides of the adoption 
community. Some excellent articles have been Shannon LC Cate's  “Ten Red Flags That Your Adoption Agency Might Be Coercive," 
Creating a Family's "Red Flags for Unethical Adoption Agencies" and 
adoptionbirthmothers.com's post, "Is Your Adoption Agency Ethical?"
These are some hard questions - but if you work through them now, you'll be able to proudly share your adoption story with your child. Adoptive parents, birth parents, social workers, adoptees --- I'd love your input. Which questions belong on this list? Which don't really matter? Which should be added?
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Hey Jackie! I'm so glad that you've found a good agency. A coordinator sitting with you for two hours to answer questions? That's amazing - but totally excellent!
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