A Jan 2010 study (www.cepr.org) shows that adoptive parents exhibit significant biases in favor of girls and against African-American babies.

Jilla - posted on 07/14/2010 ( 3 moms have responded )

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As an African American adoptive mom, I am always interested in finding out about adoption stats and promoting adoption in the African American community. I ran across this article and wanted to share it with you. It essentially confirms what we already know: "a non -African-American baby has a probability of attracting the interest of an adopting parent at least seven times as high as the corresponding probability for an African-American baby." Let's continue to do our part to promote adoption within our community. Our children need us.

For more on the article, check this out:
A Jan 2010 study (www.cepr.org) shows that adoptive parents exhibit significant biases in favor of girls and against African-American babies. A non-African-American baby relinquished for adoption attracts the interest of potential adoptive parents with probability 11.5% if it is a girl and 7.9% if it is a boy. As for race, a non-African-American baby has a probability of attracting the interest of an adopting parent at least seven times as high as the corresponding probability for an African-American baby. In addition, we show that a child’s desirability in the adoption process depends significantly on time to birth (increasing over the pregnancy, but decreasing after birth) and on adoption costs. We also document the attitudes toward babies’ characteristics across different categories of adoptive parents - heterosexual and same-sex couples, as well as single women and foreign couples. Finally, we consider several recently discussed policies excluding same-sex and foreign couples from the adoption process. In our data, such policies would reduce the number of adopted babies by 6% and 33%, respectively.
DP7647 Gender and Racial Biases: Evidence from Child Adoption
Author(s): Mariagiovanna Baccara , Allan Collard-Wexler , Leonardo Felli , Leeat Yariv
Publication Date: January 2010

This paper uses a new data set on domestic child adoption to document the preferences of potential adoptive parents over born and unborn babies relinquished for adoption by their birth mothers.\

Keyword(s): Child Adoption , Gender Bias , Matching , Racial Bias , Search
JEL(s): C78 , J13 , J15 , J16
Programme Areas: Industrial Organization , Labour Economics
Link to this Page: www.cepr.org/pubs/dps/DP7647.asp

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Saundra - posted on 01/03/2011

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I agree we moved to the top of the list for our daughters because we were not looking for light skinned children

Tolanda - posted on 10/03/2010

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Hmmmm....very interesting. I'm VERY passionate about this very topic. Thanks for sharing the valuable info!

Nyree - posted on 07/15/2010

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We adopted our son, but it was not our first option. I found that i preferred my first be a girl, however in the end that didn't matter. the biggest reason for hesitation at 1st was cost. I mean really, we didn't have 20000 lying around. We went through our local DSS and we didn't get an infant but he is a great kid. If promoting adoption in the African-American Community, I believe DSS should definitely be promoted for the cost benefit. It only cost us a physical at the doctor and our kid is fine mentally and physically.