Babies without Borders: Adoption and Migration across the Americas

Babies without Borders: Adoption and Migration across the Americas

by Karen Dubinsky
Babies without Borders: Adoption and Migration across the Americas

Babies without Borders: Adoption and Migration across the Americas

by Karen Dubinsky

Paperback

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Overview

While international adoptions have risen in the public eye and recent scholarship has covered transnational adoption from Asia to the U.S., adoptions between North America and Latin America have been overshadowed and, in some cases, forgotten. In this nuanced study of adoption, Karen Dubinsky expands the historical record while she considers the political symbolism of children caught up in adoption and migration controversies in Canada, the United States, Cuba, and Guatemala.
Babies without Borders tells the interrelated stories of Cuban children caught in Operation Peter Pan, adopted Black and Native American children who became icons in the Sixties, and Guatemalan children whose “disappearance” today in transnational adoption networks echoes their fate during the country’s brutal civil war. Drawing from archival research as well as from her critical observations as an adoptive parent, Dubinsky moves debates around transnational adoption beyond the current dichotomy—the good of “humanitarian rescue,” against the evil of “imperialist kidnap.” Integrating the personal with the scholarly, Babies without Borders exposes what happens when children bear the weight of adult political conflicts.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780814720929
Publisher: New York University Press
Publication date: 06/28/2010
Pages: 210
Product dimensions: 5.90(w) x 8.80(h) x 0.60(d)

About the Author

Karen Dubinsky is a professor in the Department of Global Development Studies and the Department of History at Queen’s University. She is the author of The Second Greatest Disappointment: Honeymooning and Tourism at Niagara Falls and Improper Advances: Rape and Heterosexual Conflict in Ontario, 1880-1929.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments
1 Children and the Stories We Tell about Them
2 The National Baby: Creating Monumental Children in Cuba, from Operation Peter Pan to Elián González
3 The Hybrid Baby: Domestic Interracial Adoption since the 1950s
4 The Missing Baby: Transnational Adoption and the Vanishing Children of Guatemala
5 Conclusion: Setting the Agenda for a Happy Childhood

Notes
Selected Bibliography
Index

What People are Saying About This

Ellen Herman

'Deeply researched, beautifully written, and brimming with insight, Babies Without Borders illustrates how profoundly narratives about rescuing and stealing children have distorted our understanding of international adoption throughout its history. From Cuba and Canada to Guatemala, babies caught up in the wars, refugee migrations, and other global calamities of the past half-century have paid a very high price for the privilege of serving as symbols of national pride, vulnerability, and destiny. Dubinsky refreshingly shifts our attention from Asia to Latin America, insists on telling stories from both sides of the border, and offers compelling evidence for the view that international power is inextricably linked to some of the most intimate experiences of family life—including her own.'

Louis A. Perez

'By making children the subject of her research, Dubinsky has provided original insight into the moral premises by which power is exercised and experienced. To approach children as highly-prized objects within paradigms of transnational privilege-the continuation of politics by other means-is to expose in the most intimate of settings the ways that the powerful and the powerless are drawn together into an inexorable relationship with one another, with all too predictable outcomes. This is a thoughtful and thought-provoking work of exemplary scholarship.'

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