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" Journalist and Religion Dispatches associate editor Joyce (Quiverfull:
Inside the Christian Patriarchy Movement, 2009) broadens the
understanding of adoption's conundrums, not only within the United
States, but also internationally, with deep investigations of children
from Liberia, Ethiopia, Korea, Rwanda, Haiti and China. Perhaps the
least publicized development within the adoption realm during the past
few decades is the aggressive involvement of evangelical churches.
Parishioners, even those with multiple biological children, are adopting
orphans from overseas, as well as many children who have been wrenched
from biological mothers (and sometimes fathers) as part of for-profit
schemes. Some of the church members see adoption as a faith-based
mission--as an alternative to abortion but also part of a biblical
mandate to care for the oppressed and impoverished while simultaneously
saving souls. Joyce explains that although such adoptions might seem
like a win-win solution, in fact, birth mothers and families, especially
in third-world countries, are torn apart by the international
transactions. Joyce studied academic treatises and traveled widely
across the U.S. and to locales in other nations rarely visited by
tourists. The number of compelling anecdotes and case studies is
impressive. Whenever ethically defensible, Joyce uses real names and
normally indicates fictitious names when she saw no moral alternative.
Although the overall picture is grim despite tsunamis of good
intentions, the grimness is occasionally relieved by righteous
individuals and institutions trying to do better. One of the relatively
upbeat case studies focuses on the megachurch of celebrity pastor Rick
Warren. He admits his evangelical members involved in international
adoptions have not always proceeded perfectly, but Joyce suggests that
he is sincere about learning from mistakes in a drastically shifting
landscape. Groundbreaking investigative and explanatory reporting." (KIrkus Reviews)
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