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  2. List of international adoption scandals - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_international...

    The European countries included Belgium, Germany, Netherlands, Norway, Denmark. This was a major human rights violation by the military dictatorship as most of the Korean girls were not real orphans and had living biological parents but were given false papers to show that they were orphans and exported to white parents for money.

  3. New State Department ruling makes inter-country adoption ...

    www.aol.com/news/state-department-ruling-makes...

    Inter-country adoption is still important when children cannot be placed with families in their country of origin, and UNICEF estimates there to be 17.6 million children who have lost both of ...

  4. International adoption - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/International_adoption

    Adoption policies for each country vary widely. Information such as the age of the adoptive parents, financial status, educational level, marital status and history, number of dependent children in the house, sexual orientation, weight, psychological health, and ancestry are used by countries to determine what parents are eligible to adopt from that country.

  5. International adoption of South Korean children - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/International_adoption_of...

    A 1988 article which was originally in The Progressive and reprinted in Pound Pup Legacy said that the South Korean government made fifteen to twenty million dollars per year by the adoption of Korean orphans by families in other countries. The 1988 news article also said that the adoption of Korean orphans out of South Korea had three more ...

  6. Orphanage - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orphanage

    Worldwide, residential institutions like orphanages can often be detrimental to the psychological development of affected children. In countries where orphanages are no longer in use, the long-term care of unwarded children by the state has been transitioned to a domestic environment, with an emphasis on replicating a family home.

  7. Deinstitutionalisation (orphanages and children's institutions)

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deinstitutionalisation...

    The nature of orphanages means that they often fail to provide the individual sustained attention and stimulation a child would get from growing up within a family. In many cases the children living in them are at risk of harm. [37] There are also many reports of orphanages being abusive [33] [38] or having very high death rates. [39]

  8. 1980s–1990s Romanian orphans phenomenon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1980s-1990s_Romanian...

    The conditions in orphanages had declined after 1982, as a result of Ceauşescu's decision to seize much of the country's economic output in order to repay its foreign debt. [4] Due to the economic downturn , electricity and heat in orphanages were often intermittent and food was scarce.

  9. Child laundering - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Child_laundering

    There is a complex hierarchy within the child laundering business which includes governments, orphanages, intermediaries, birth families, and adoptive families.The people who oversee these child laundering rings are estimated to make $2,000 to $20,000 per overseas adoption. [2]