Adoption and Its Competitors in American Society
Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14097/15
Results of a national survey regarding adoption in the United States
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Item Open Access New Research Finds Millions of Women Unaware of Adoption Process and Benefits(Cultural Research Center at Arizona Christian University, the Opt Institute, 2022-06-09) Barna, George"The United States has an estimated 65 million women who are currently considered to be of childbearing age (15 to 44 years of age). With research showing that growing numbers of young women have little interest in having children, the choices of those women who do give birth take on increasing importance. There are three choices those women can make: give birth and raise the child; give birth and place the child for adoption; or abort the child. The forthcoming U.S. Supreme Court decision in the Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization case has focused much attention on abortion. But what about adoption? A new research study conducted among women of childbearing age suggests that millions of women who might otherwise consider adoption to be an appealing alternative are unaware of how adoption works. The study, Adoption & Its Competitors, was conducted by George Barna and the Cultural Research Center at Arizona Christian University for The Opt Institute, a non-profit research foundation and think tank dedicated to improving access to and support for private infant adoption, better understanding women’s decision-making in the context of expected pregnancies, and to helping mothers consider adoption as a meaningful option."Item Open Access Post-Dobbs, Survey Explains Adoption Perspectives of Prospective Mothers(Cultural Research Center at Arizona Christian University, the Opt Institute, 2022-07-12) Barna, George"With the recent Dobbs v. Jackson’s Women’s Health Organization decision rendered by the U.S. Supreme Court, returning abortion policy to the people and their elected officials, the insights regarding women’s personal decision-making when it comes to pregnancy obtained from a recent national survey, conducted by the Cultural Research Center at Arizona Christian University and commissioned by the Opt Institute, take on a new importance. Now more than ever, understanding what motivates women to make a decision about how to handle a pregnancy—especially their views of adoption—becomes even more significant. The study, Adoption and Its Competitors in American Society, was conducted by George Barna and the Cultural Research Center at Arizona Christian University for the Opt Institute, a non-profit research foundation and think tank dedicated to improving access to and support for private infant adoption. It seeks to promote better understanding of women’s decision-making in the context of expected pregnancies, and to helping mothers consider adoption as a meaningful option."