Project Details
Good Parents – Adoption Services in Germany from the Perspective of Applicants and Mediators
Applicants
Professorin Dr. Alexandra König; Dr. Arne Niederbacher
Subject Area
Empirical Social Research
Term
since 2023
Project identifier
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Project number 524945366
The adoption of unrelated children is seldom researched from a sociological perspective. While there are a few studies on the period after matching, we know next to nothing about the preceding process of adopting a child: How are adoption applicants – mostly childless – evaluated for their ‚suitability’ as parents and classified as (un)suitable? Among the many ‚suitable’ applicants, how is one couple then identified as the best fit to adopt a specific child? The process of adopting a child will be investigated from an interactionist perspective as a co-construction of good parents and parenthood by adoption applicants and adoption mediators. With our project proposal, we want to a) understand adoption in Germany from the perspective of both adoption applicants and adoption mediators. Furthermore, the special case of adoption offers b) a good opportunity to grasp the normative pattern of good childhood/parenthood and reveals c) the power this normative pattern has to (re)produce inequalities. On the basis of this ‚small’ subject, the project will allow us to study fundamental sociological questions about childhood/family and social inequalities. The research project is of particular importance against the backdrop of changing forms of family, which are already evident in the guidelines for adopting a child (especially regarding same sex and elderly adoption applicants). The data basis consists of a) longitudinal, process-accompanying interviews with adoption mediators and applicants, b) participatory observation of team meetings in the youth welfare office and of informational events for applicants, as well as c) documents such as case files from the youth welfare office and self-reports made by the applicants.
DFG Programme
Research Grants