Every hour 1625 children are forced to live on the streets through the abuse or death of an adult. In terms of world population the number of orphans globally accounts for the tenth highest population in the world. While many Western countries have embraced intercountry adoption as a legitimate way of forming a family, in Australia it is cumbersome and slow with waiting periods of between four and ten years.
Today there are over 140 million children living without parents. In 2008, approximately 17,500 children found families in the USA through intercountry adoption. In that same year, only 270 children found families in Australia via intercountry adoption (a further 70 Australian-born children found families through domestic adoption).
The reality is that, at most, only 0.02% of the world’s children without families will have a chance of finding a family through international adoption and there will be many Australian families yearning for a child who will be unable to adopt from another country due to government or state legislation.
The international principles that govern intercountry adoption are set out in The Hague Convention which aims to protect children and their families against the risks of illegal, irregular, premature or ill-prepared adoptions abroad. It does this by establishing principles that focus on intercountry adoptions and ensuring that such adoptions only occur where it is in the best interests of the child and with respect for the child’s fundamental rights.
Top Comments
We've struggled for 11 years to have a child, all we have to show is the heartache of 8 miscarriages.
We can't afford international adoption and domestic adoption is rare as hens teeth.
My DH's age comes into it as well once you take into account the waiting period.
It's sad, we'd provide a very loving home but because we can't afford the $$ to apply and see the application through, we can't.
Something needs to be done for sure.
I know it's an old post andeveryone has moved on, but thankyou for this. I struggle to understand the emphasis society places on keeping children with their biological parents, no matter how neglectful they might be...