Child Welfare League of America on
Access to Adoption Records by Adults who were Adopted
(Copied from
http://www.cwla.org/programs/adoption/open_records4.htm, the web
site for the Child Welfare League of America, the largest and most
respected affiliation of child placement agencies in the world.)
- The agency providing adoption services should support efforts to
ensure that adults who were adopted have direct access to identifying
information about themselves and their birth parents.
- The prevailing legal practice in the United States prohibits
adults who were adopted as children from obtaining access to their
original birth certificates or to identifying information contained in
their adoption records.
- The practice of sealing records has come under scrutiny as the
benefits of openness in adoption for the adopted individual, birth
parents, and adoptive parents have come to be understood. The
interests of adopted adults in having information about their origins
have come to be recognized as having critical psychological importance
as well as importance in understanding their health and genetic
status. Because such information is essential to adopted adults'
identity and health needs, the agency should promote policies that
provide adopted adults with direct access to identifying information.
- This trend toward openness has already been recognized by the
Indian Child Welfare Act (P.L. 95-608). Under that Act, courts must
unseal records for American Indian children, on request, and provide
information necessary for the adopted individual to ascertain his or
her tribal affiliation and membership. Such information may include
the names of the adopted child's birth parents.
Child Welfare League of America Standards of Excellence for
Adoption Services, 2000. Section 6.22, p. 87.
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