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  2. International adoption of South Korean children - Wikipedia

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

    A 2012 study in the Journal of Adolescent Research of Korean adoptees in the United States found that white parents of Korean adoptees whose average age was 17.8 years old tended to try to socialize their adopted Korean children to Korean culture by doing overt actions such as going to Korean restaurants or having them attend Korean culture ...

  3. Woman's search for birth parents leads to landmark S.Korea ...

    www.aol.com/news/womans-search-birth-parents...

    Decades after she was sent for adoption in the United States, Kara Bos’ quest to find her birth parents in South Korea moved a step closer on Friday when a Seoul court ruled that a South Korean ...

  4. Birth mothers in South Korea (international adoption) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Birth_mothers_in_South...

    The Internet represented a new opportunity for birth mothers to find community through shared experiences. In 2001, an Internet café, called A Sad Love Story of Mothers Who Sent Their Children Away for Adoption, became a popular place among birth mothers to share their stories, foster community, and process emotions. It was established by user ...

  5. 50 Heartwarming Adoption Photos That Might Have You Crying ...

    www.aol.com/63-heartwarming-photos-children-were...

    Image credits: gays_with_kids "In the UK, adoption is the future plan for about 5% of the children in foster care," Khalida says. "Across the Atlantic, in the USA, this number is around 2%.

  6. How 'Broker' and 'Return to Seoul' reveal hard truths about ...

    www.aol.com/broker-return-seoul-reveal-hard...

    Broker focuses on a teenage girl who leaves her infant at a church's safe haven baby box, while Return to Seoul tells the story of a French woman who reunites with her birth family just days after ...

  7. Global Overseas Adoptees' Link - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Global_Overseas_Adoptees'_Link

    The first major task of GOAL was to lobby for the inclusion of adoptees in the Overseas Koreans Act. This act was passed in 1999 and allowed adoptees residency on a F-4 visa. The visa gives every adoptee the right to reside and work in Korea for three years at a time and can be renewed. [1] GOAL was founded by Ami Nafzger in 1997.

  8. Brothers Home - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brothers_Home

    The AP further revealed that six U.S. adoption agencies—Holt International, Children's Home Society of Minnesota, Dillon International, Children's Home Society of California, Catholic Social Services, and Spence-Chapin—had received adoptees from Brothers. [24] The European countries included Belgium, Germany, Netherlands, Norway, and Denmark.

  9. Decades in a country he can’t call home: South Korean’s US ...

    www.aol.com/news/decades-country-t-call-home...

    Adam Crapser has become something of a cause celebre for what critics say is a flawed United States law that unfairly leaves tens of thousands of international adoptees in limbo without citizenship.