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Cindy Baldassi (2007)
The Legal Status of Aboriginal Customary Adoption Across Canada: Comparisons, Contrasts and Convergences
J. Ladner (1978)
Mixed families: Adopting across racial boundaries
BA Atwood (2002)
587Emory Law Journal, 51
D. Sanders (1976)
Natural Parents v. Superintendent of Child WelfareOsgoode Hall Law Journal
R. Kennedy (2003)
Interracial Intimacies: Sex, Marriage, Identity, and Adoption
Sheri Hazeltine (2002)
Speedy Termination of Alaska Native Parental Rights: The 1998 Changes to Alaska’s Child in Need of Aid Statutes and Their Inherent Conflict with the Mandates of the Federal Indian Child Welfare ActAlaska Law Review, 19
Naomi Cahn (2001)
Children's Interests And Information Disclosure: Who Provided The Egg and Sperm? Or Mommy, Where ( And Whom) Do I Come From?
M. Yablon-Zug (2013)
Adoptive Couple v. Baby Girl: Two and a Half Ways to Destroy Indian LawMichigan Law Review, First Impressions, 111
Tanya Washington (2005)
Loving Grutter : Recognizing Race in Transracial AdoptionsGeorge Mason University Civil Rights Law Journal, 16
Cynthia Hawkins-León, Carla Bradley (2002)
Race and Transracial Adoption: The Answer is Neither Simply Black or White Nor Right or WrongCatholic University Law Review, 51
Christine Bakeis (2012)
The Indian Child Welfare Act of 1978: Violating Personal Rights for the Sake of the TribeNotre Dame Journal of Law, Ethics & Public Policy, 10
B. Clayton (2008)
A DAY LATE & A DOLLAR SHORT: SHOULD UTAH'S UNMARRIED DADS GET ONE MORE CHANCE TO CLAIM THEIR NEWBORNS?Journal of Law and Family Studies, 10
B. Woodhouse (1995)
Are You My Mother?: Conceptualizing Children’s Identity Rights in Transracial AdoptionsDuke Journal of Gender Law & Policy, 2
J. Hollinger (1988)
Beyond the Best Interests of the Tribe: The Indian Child Welfare Act and the Adoption of Indian Children, 66
M. Mossman (2004)
Families and the Law in Canada: Cases and Commentary
[In terms of the need to preserve blood-ties via family reunification, the various strands of case law seem to fall into three, occasionally overlapping categories; a Constitutionally protected right to not be deprived of parenthood, consent to relinquishment that is flawed, absent or subsequently revoked, and a statutory duty to protect tribal cultural heritage.]
Published: Jul 18, 2013
Keywords: Child Welfare; Good Interest; Adoptive Parent; Birth Parent; Health Service Executive
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