The geography of transnational adoption: kin and place in globalization |
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Authors: | Jessaca Leinaweaver Sonja van Wichelen |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Anthropology, Brown University, Box 1921, Providence RI 02912, USAjessaca_leinaweaver@brown.edu;3. Department of Sociology and Social Policy, University of Sydney, R.C. Mills A26, NSW 2006 Sydney, Australia |
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Abstract: | International adoption involves crossing borders; it invokes space and geography as adoptive parents imagine distant countries, as children are moved from one nation to another, and as adoptees and their families return to their countries of origin. The spatiality of belonging and identity – but also of trauma and violence – are central concerns for the people involved and to the operations of their cultural, political, and legal practice. Yet surprisingly, cultural geographers have not yet developed a conceptualization of transnational adoption that theorizes it as a constitutive aspect of geographies of migration, domestic geographies, and geography of childhood. In this issue we seek to set out an agenda for the cultural and political geographies of transnational adoption. We do so by discussing three interrelated themes: the adoption-migration nexus, geographies of relatedness, and the biopolitics of mobility. |
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Keywords: | international adoption geographies of childhood transnational migration reproductive biopolitics identity and place-making geography of relatedness |
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