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'Ethnic minorities put off adopting'

Posted: 09 September 2004 | Subscribe Online


The debate on parents' right to smack their children is among factors preventing people from some religious and cultural minorities from adopting, a report commissioned by children's charity NCH has claimed.

Social workers at Nottingham, Tower Hamlets and Bradford councils feel the emphasis in fostering and adoption on no smacking has caused some adopters to drop out, the study by Bristol University Hadley Centre for Adoption and Fostering Care Studies found.

Other problems facing agencies looking for families to adopt black, Asian and mixed parentage children identified in the study include social workers' concerns about placing children with individuals with fundamentalist views and potential adopters' experiences of racism in other council departments.
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As a result, more than 11,000 ethnic minority children out of a total 59,700 looked-after children in the UK remained in local authority care in March 2002.

Researcher Julie Selwyn said: "The debate on smacking and concerns about fundamentalist views were not strictly ethnic minority issues, they related to all religions including right-wing Christianity and went across all cultures.

"Adopters were concerned with the bureaucracy and the amount of control they believed social workers had over their lives."
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A two-year Department for Education and Skills study into why children from ethnic minorities spend an average of 300 days longer than white children in having their adoption and fostering needs processed is due to begin in January.

- Finding Adoptive Families for Black, Asian and Black Mixed-Parentage Children from www.nch.org.uk


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