TY - JOUR
T1 - ‘Writing about our adoption’: A qualitative study on intercountry adoptive parents’ narratives during the first post-adoption year
AU - Canzi, Elena Camilla Rosa
AU - Molgora, Sara
AU - Ferrari, Laura
AU - Ranieri, Sonia
AU - Mescieri, Lavinia
AU - Rosnati, Rosa
PY - 2021
Y1 - 2021
N2 - Intercountry adoption requires adoptive parents to assume their parenthood as well as to acknowledge the cultural and ethnic origins of their child. Narratives are effective means to help individuals cope with non-normative transitions, including adoption, as they allow them to make sense of and legitimise their experiences. This qualitative study sought to extend knowledge about the value of using narrative methods with adoptive families to explore how the language they employ determines the ways in which they perceive situations and vice versa. It uses the word-driven textual analysis software T-LAB to identify key topics highlighted by parents and analyse them in relation to specific variables. Child characteristics, such as gender, age at adoption and birth country, and family variables, such as mother’s and father’s narratives and first or not-first parenting experience, were considered. From the 37 narratives sampled, those parents adopting from Asia and Eastern Europe, mothers and first-time parents faced the most challenges.
AB - Intercountry adoption requires adoptive parents to assume their parenthood as well as to acknowledge the cultural and ethnic origins of their child. Narratives are effective means to help individuals cope with non-normative transitions, including adoption, as they allow them to make sense of and legitimise their experiences. This qualitative study sought to extend knowledge about the value of using narrative methods with adoptive families to explore how the language they employ determines the ways in which they perceive situations and vice versa. It uses the word-driven textual analysis software T-LAB to identify key topics highlighted by parents and analyse them in relation to specific variables. Child characteristics, such as gender, age at adoption and birth country, and family variables, such as mother’s and father’s narratives and first or not-first parenting experience, were considered. From the 37 narratives sampled, those parents adopting from Asia and Eastern Europe, mothers and first-time parents faced the most challenges.
KW - Intercountry adoption
KW - T-LAB textual analysis software
KW - adoptive parents
KW - narratives
KW - qualitative study
KW - Intercountry adoption
KW - T-LAB textual analysis software
KW - adoptive parents
KW - narratives
KW - qualitative study
UR - http://hdl.handle.net/10807/203481
U2 - 10.1177/03085759211003171
DO - 10.1177/03085759211003171
M3 - Article
SN - 0308-5759
VL - 45
SP - 122
EP - 137
JO - ADOPTION & FOSTERING
JF - ADOPTION & FOSTERING
ER -