Word for abandoned child

‘ABANDONED CHILD’ is a 14 letter
Phrase
starting with A and ending with D

Crossword answers for ABANDONED CHILD

Clue Answer

ABANDONED CHILD
(4)

WAIF

ABANDONED CHILD
(9)

FOUNDLING

Synonyms for WAIF

2 letter words

3 letter words

4 letter words

Top answer for ABANDONED CHILD crossword clue from newspapers

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More clues you might be interested in

  1. native to a certain area
  2. orderly grouping
  3. wearing down
  4. grumble
  5. thick fog
  6. augmented
  7. hatchet handle
  8. okie
  9. irrational fear
  10. responded
  11. halibut
  12. flora and fauna
  13. peer
  14. military unit
  15. stuff to the gills
  16. made from clay
  17. earn
  18. cow catcher
  19. part of body
  20. gateau
  21. domesticate
  22. cooling-off time
  23. simultaneous action
  24. saint
  25. identify the source of
  26. afflictions
  27. examine carefully
  28. bracken
  29. marsh wader
  30. prod

With the support of the private sector,

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При поддержке частного

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Были реализованы специальные программы по брошенным детям, безнадзорным

детям

и

детям-

инвалидам.

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The Centre for Abandoned Children and Destitute Women houses a number of women and orphan

children

and provide them with food

and care.

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сиротами.

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and women having unwanted pregnancy.

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в первую очередь жертвам изнасилования и женщинам, столкнувшимся с нежелательной беременностью.

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Unfortunately, centres for abandoned children in the area cannot give them the protection and care they deserve.

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и уход.

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It is also worth mentioning that there

is an adoption programme(international and national) for abandoned children, which was dealt with in earlier paragraphs.

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Следует отметить, что существует программа усыновления(

на международном и национальном уровнях) для детей, оставленных родителями, о чем уже упоминалось в предыдущих пунктах.

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In Liberia, WHO had implemented special programmes for abandoned children, households headed by women and rehabilitation of

child

soldiers.

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В Либерии ВОЗ занималась осуществлением специальных программ для покинутых детей, домашних хозяйств, возглавляемых женщинами, и в целях реабилитации

детей-

солдат.

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At the same time, practical measures must be taken without delay in the areas of health,

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Кроме того, необходимо безотлагательно принять конкретные меры в области здравоохранения,

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The Committee is further concerned about the difficulties in ensuring the birth registration of

children,

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Кроме того, Комитет обеспокоен по поводу трудностей, возникающих в связи с обеспечением регистрации

детей,

особенно в сельских районах,

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According to Article 87 of the Higher Education Law, higher education organizations do not charge tuition fees to

children

without parents, persons with first and second-degree disabilities,

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В соответствии со статьей 87 закона о высшем образовании высшие учебные заведения не взымают плату за учебу со студентов, не имеющих родителей, с лиц с инвалидностью первой и

второй степени, с инвалидов войны и с лиц, выросших в домах для брошенных детей.

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July 1992: Droits de l’enfant et législation en matière d’adoption(Rights of the

Child

and adoption legislation), at the National Seminar on“Adoption,

Porto-Novo, Benin. Organizers: Ministry of Labour and Social Affairs, Terre des Hommes Foundation, UNICEF.

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Июля 1992 года:» Права

ребенка

и законодательство в области усыновления», Национальный семинар по теме:» Усыновление-

новые возможности для оставленных детей«, Центр приема и профессиональной подготовки(

ЦППП), Порто- Ново, Бенин организаторы- министерство труда и социальных дел, федерация» Земля людей», ЮНИСЕФ.

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In addition to government agencies, the following provide significant help in improving the lot of

children

in institutions and establishing

UNICEF, the European Children’s Fund, Save the

Children

United Kingdom, Save the

Children

Denmark, the Soros Foundation Kyrgyzstan, UNDP, private persons, etc.

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Наряду с органами исполнительной власти значительная помощь по улучшению положения

детей,

находящихся в детских учреждениях, а также организации центров,

временных приютов для брошенных детей оказывается со стороны международных благотворительных организаций» Мээрим»,

ЮНИСЕФ, Европейского детского фонда, фонда» Спасение детей»» Великобритания»,» Спасение детей»( Дания), Фонда» Сорос- Кыргызстан», ПРООН, частных лиц и других.

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Initiatives in support of the Millennium Development Goals include projects in Senegal to help the population, and in particular young mothers,

to build a centre

for

young mothers and a centre for abandoned children, as well as the creation of a vegetable garden

of about three hectares in the area of Ziguinchor, Senegal.

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Инициативы, направленные на оказание содействия достижению целей в области развития, сформулированных в Декларации тысячелетия, включают осуществляемые в Сенегале проекты

по оказанию помощи населению, особенно молодым матерям, строительству центров

для

молодых матерей и центра для брошенных детей, а также устройству огорода на площади порядка

трех гектаров в районе Зигиншор, Сенегал.

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The Committee notes the services provided by the Directorate

for

the Protection of the

Child

and Adolescent to safeguard the

child

at risk and reinsert adolescents in difficulty, as well as the opening in 2008 of a new reception and

social insertion structure in the capital for abandoned children and young mothers in distress.

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Комитет отмечает услуги, предоставляемые Управлением по защите прав

ребенка

и подростка в целях оказания помощи

детям,

относящимся к группам риска, и реинтеграции в общество подростков, оказавшихся в трудной жизненной ситуации, а также открытие в 2008 году в столице новой структуры по приему и

социальной интеграции безнадзорных детей и молодых матерей, оказавшихся в бедственном положении.

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The Vincentian Family is present on five continents and engaged in various ministries in which they»welcome the stranger» in their midst: health care ministry, works of education, formation, works of human promotion and development, works in which they care

for

homeless people,

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Викентийская Семья присутствует на пяти континентах и принимает участие в различных миссиях, в которых они« приветствуют чужеземца» в своей среде: медицинской миссии, работе в образовании, формации, работе в продвижении и развитии человека, работе, посвященной заботе о бездомных,

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Decision No. 055/MASSNCRA/SG//DAS/SASS of 5 April 1992,

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Решение№ 055/ MASSNCRA/ SG/ DAS/ SASS от 5 апреля 1992

года о создании Специальной комиссии по передаче детей, оставленных родителями, в опекунские семьи;

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Decision No. 055/MASSNCRA/SG/DAS/SASS of 5 April 1992 on the

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Распоряжение№ 055/ MASSNCRA/ SG/ DAS/ SASS от 5 апреля 1992

года о создании специальной комиссии по размещению детей,

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Cooperation between the Government,

the private sector and non-governmental organizations had resulted in programmes for abandoned children, street

children

and those with disabilities.

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В результате совместных

мер правительства, частного сектора и неправительственных организаций разработаны программы помощи брошенным детям, беспризорным и

детям-

инвалидам.

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Djibouti noted the efforts expended by Equatorial Guinea to promote and protect human rights, notably the establishment of a

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Джибути отметила предпринятые Экваториальной Гвинеей усилия, направленные на поощрение и защиту прав человека,

в

особенности создание суда по делам несовершеннолетних,

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However, the Institute gradually degenerated into a depository or

detention centre for abandoned children, more like a prison and indeed run by prison officials whose sole policy was punishment and illtreatment.

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Однако со временем он деградировал и превратился в систему центров-

практически тюрем- для содержания оставленных без попечения несовершеннолетних, а их администрация своей политикой сделала репрессии, наказания и жестокое обращение.

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Adoption of a law concerning foster care(kafalah) for abandoned children that makes it easier to comply with the rules governing such care

and guarantees that the

children

benefit from appropriate care without discrimination;

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Принятие закона о патронатном воспитании( kafalah) оставленных детей, упрощающего соблюдение норм, регулирующих такой вид воспитания, и гарантирующих

его получение

детьми

необходимого воспитания на недискриминационной основе;

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Civil society associations that care for abandoned children, mothers who cannot establish the paternity of their

child

and single mothers also receive support that assists them in looking after such categories of

children.

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Ассоциации гражданского общества, занимающиеся проблемами брошенных детей, матерей, которые не могут установить отцовство своего

ребенка,

и одиноких матерей, также получают поддержку, помогающую им в обеспечении ухода за

детьми,

относящимися к этим категориям.

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Responding to a statement about migration, the Regional Director reported that UNICEF had recently completed a study stating that every 58 seconds, one person is lost from

the region to permanent migration, and the social costs of this phenomenon were high for abandoned children.

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В ответ

на

заявление по вопросу о миграции Региональный директор сообщила, что ЮНИСЕФ недавно завершил исследование, результаты которого говорят, что каждые 58 секунд один человек

покидает регион в результате постоянной миграции, и брошенные дети испытывают на себе тяжелые социальные последствия этого явления.

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Steps have been taken to upgrade support centres

for

persons with disabilities: signing of an agreement with the

Meknes Tafilalet region on the equipment of a centre for abandoned children with disabilities in Meknes(30 June 2008);

support

for

the creation by nine associations of support centres

for

persons with disabilities; and equipment of a sound library

for

persons with autism in Taza.

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Проведена работа по модернизации центров приема

для

инвалидов: заключен договор с областью Мекнес-

Тафилалет об оборудовании центра для детей— инвалидов, брошенных в Мекнесе( 30 июня 2008 года),

оказана поддержка в создании девятью ассоциациями центров приема

для

инвалидов и оборудовании фонотеки

для

аутистов в Тазе;

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Private-public-NGO cooperation had resulted in programmes for abandoned

children,

street

children

and children with disabilities, and a special hospital had been established to meet the medical needs of autistic

children.

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Сотрудничество между частными,

государственными и неправительственными организациями привело к появлению программ для брошенных

детей,

беспризорников и детей с ограниченными возможностями; была открыта специальная больница

для

лечения

детей,

страдающих аутизмом.

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Relevant Saudi governmental

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Соответствующие саудовские правительственные

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Dear Heavenly Father,

Cover this family with your strength. Send them your support system of people in their community that want to be the hands and feet of God.

Let their paths cross so that the ___________ will feel your presence in these hard days. Encourage them al, and show each one of them that they not alone. Bless them with the presence and assurance of your love and care.

Bless these children to be a blessing to whomever they are under the care of. Comfort this family that lost their parents too soon.

Protect them and seal them with the name of Jesus on their souls that they will be branded and come to know you in your time. Give them the wisdom to never be bitter against you for the death of their elders. Give them the wisdom to take care of each other.

Allow this family to come together through this tragedy not be torn apart by the enemy. We stand with our shields of faith and trust in you to protect this family from the firey darts of the enemy. In Jesus’ precious name, Amen.”

Author: Julia Shalom Jordan

If you or someone you know is being abused in any way, do not recommend using prayer as a substitute for getting help. We, at shalombewithyou.com recommend prayer in addition to getting help.  Reach out to someone safe who will assist you in protecting yourself.  If you notice someone else who is being abused, seek guidance on how to help that person from a certified abuse counselor.

If you would like to be an active part in healing a life that is hurting from neglect or poverty, please consider donating to World Vision.org click here to find out more:

http://donate.worldvision.org/OA_HTML/xxwv2DoChildSearch_B.jsp?xxwvLocation=0000

Child abandonment is the practice of relinquishing interests and claims over one’s offspring in an illegal way, with the intent of never resuming or reasserting guardianship.[1] The phrase is typically used to describe the physical abandonment of a child, but it can also include severe cases of neglect and emotional abandonment, such as when parents fail to provide financial and emotional support for children over an extended period of time.[1] An abandoned child is referred to as a foundling (as opposed to a runaway or an orphan).[1] Baby dumping refers to parents leaving a child younger than 12 months in a public or private place with the intent of terminating their care for the child.[1] It is also known as rehoming when adoptive parents use illegal means, such as the internet, to find new homes for their children.[2][3][4] In the case where child abandonment is anonymous within the first 12 months, it may be referred to as secret child abandonment.[5]

In the United States and many other countries, child abandonment is classified under a subsection of child abuse. In the United states it is punishable as a class 4 felony, and a second or subsequent offense after a prior conviction is a class 3 felony (see classes of felonies) with different state judicial systems treating it with varying severities and classifications.[6] Child abandonment may lead to the permanent loss of parental rights of the parents.[7] Some states allow for reinstatement of the parental rights, with about half of the states in the US having have laws for this purpose.[8][9] Perpetrators can also be charged with reckless abandonment if victims die as a result of their actions or neglect.[10]

Official statistics on child abandonment do not exist in most countries.[5] In Denmark, an estimate of child abandonment prevalence was 1.7 infants per 100,000 births,[5] with another source suggesting higher prevalence in Central and Eastern European countries such as Slovakia with data suggesting 4.9 per 1,000 live births.[11]

Causes[edit]

  • Poverty and homelessness are often causes of child abandonment. People living in countries with poor social welfare systems (i.e. China, Myanmar, Mexico, and other countries) who are not financially capable of taking care of a child are more likely to abandon their children because of a lack of resources.[12][13] In some cases the parents already have a child or children, but are unable to take care of another child at that time.[13]
  • In societies where young women and young men are looked down upon for being teenage or single mothers and single fathers, child abandonment is more common.[12][13]
  • Children born out of the confines of marriage may be abandoned in a family’s attempt to prevent being shamed by their community.[14]
  • Physical disability, mental illness, and substance abuse problems that parents face[12][13]
  • Children who are born with congenital disorders or other health complications may be abandoned if their parents feel unequipped to provide them with the level of care that their condition requires.[12][13][15][16]
  • In cultures where the sex of the child is of utmost importance, parents are more likely to abandon a baby of the undesired sex.[17] Similarly, people may choose to pursue the often controversial option of sex-selective abortion.[18]
  • Political conditions, such as war and displacement of a family, also cause for parents to abandon their children.[14]
  • Additionally, a parent being incarcerated or deported can result in the involuntary abandonment of a child, even if the parent(s) did not voluntarily relinquish their parental role.[19][20]
  • Disownment of a child is a form of abandonment which entails ending contact with, and support for, one’s dependent. Disownment tends to occur later in a child’s life, generally due to a conflict between the parent(s) and the child, but can also occur when children are still young. Reasons include: divorce of parents, discovering the true paternity of a child, and a child’s actions bringing shame to a family; most commonly, breaking the law, teenage pregnancy, major religious or ideological differences, and identifying as LGBT.[19][21][22][23][24][25][26]

Effects on survivors[edit]

  • Possibility of experiencing abuse and neglect in institutionalized care[27]
  • Low self-esteem stemming from feelings of guilt about being at fault for being abandoned[28]
  • Separation anxiety: feelings of anxiety about being separated from parents or caregivers[28]
  • Attachment issues: difficulty becoming emotionally attached to and trusting other people, especially caregivers[29]
  • Abandonment issues, characteristic of abandoned child syndrome, including social alienation, guilt, anxiety, clinginess, insomnia and nightmares, eating disorders, anger issues, depression, substance abuse, and traumatic reenactment through romantic relationships[30][31][32][33]
  • Symptoms of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), referred to as posttraumatic stress disorder of abandonment.[34]
  • Depending upon the severity of their symptoms, children who have developed certain maladjusted tendencies in social interaction may be diagnosed with reactive attachment disorder or disinhibited social engagement disorder.[35]
  • For children who are abandoned in dangerous places, such as dumpsters, doorsteps, and other public areas, exposure to the elements and physical injury are distinct possibilities.[36]

Financial cost[edit]

In 2015, the United States’ government spent over $9 billion to support 427,910 children who were in foster care.[37]

Child abandonment laws[edit]

Child abandonment is illegal in most of the world, and depending upon the facts of the case and laws of the state in which it occurs could be prosecuted as a misdemeanor or felony criminal offense.[38]

Prevention[edit]

  • Providing access to sex education and to family planning resources, like contraception, and abortion can help prevent people who cannot take care of, or do not want to raise, children from becoming pregnant in the first place.[13]
  • Evidence has shown that, when bans on abortion are lifted, the number of abandoned, abused, and neglected children goes down in response.[39][40] However, access is an issue. In the United States, 87% of all counties, and 97% of all rural counties, do not have any access to abortion services.[41]
  • Governmental assistance can be provided in the form of parental counseling, post-natal services, mental health services, and other community support services for parents who are at a higher risk of abandoning their children because of age, support, physical ability, mental illness, or poverty.[13][42][43]

History[edit]

Historically, many cultures practiced abandonment of infants, often called «infant exposure.» Children were left on hillsides, in the wilderness, near churches, and in other public places. If taken up by others, the children might join another family either as slaves or as free family members. Roman societies in particular chose slaves to raise their children rather than family members, who were often indifferent towards their children.[12] Although being found by others would allow children who were abandoned to often survive, exposure is sometimes compared to infanticide—as described by Tertullian in his Apology: «it is certainly the more cruel way to kill… by exposure to cold and hunger and dogs.» Despite the comparison, other sources report that infanticide and exposure were viewed as morally different in ancient times.[44]

In the Early Middle Ages parents who did not want to raise their children gave them to monasteries along with a small fee, an act known as oblation. In times of social stress monasteries often received large numbers of children. By the high Middle Ages oblation was less common and something that was more often arranged privately between the monastery and the parents of the child. Sometimes medieval hospitals took care of abandoned children at the community’s expense, but some refused to do so on the grounds that being willing to accept abandoned children would increase abandonment rates.[45] Medieval laws in Europe governing child abandonment, as for example the Visigothic Code, often prescribed that the person who had taken up the child was entitled to the child’s service as a slave.[46] Conscripting or enslaving children into armies and labor pools often occurred as a consequence of war or pestilence when many children were left parentless. Abandoned children then became the ward of the state, military organization, or religious group. When this practice happened en masse, it had the advantage of ensuring the strength and continuity of cultural and religious practices in medieval society.[47]

Early Modern Europe saw the rise of foundling homes and increased abandonment of children to these homes. These numbers continued to rise and peaked when 5% of all births resulted in abandonment in France around 1830. The national reaction to this was to limit the resources provided by foundling homes and switch to foster homes instead such that fewer children would die within overcrowded foundling homes during infancy. As access to contraception increased and economic conditions improved in Europe towards the end of the 19th century the numbers of children being abandoned declined.[12]

Abandonment increased towards the end of the 19th century, particularly in the United States. The largest migration of abandoned children in history took place in the United States between 1853 and 1929. Over one hundred and twenty thousand orphans (not all of whom were intentionally abandoned) were shipped west on railroad cars, where families agreed to foster the children in exchange for their use as farmhands, household workers, etc.[48] Orphan trains were highly popular as a source of free labor. The sheer size of the displacement as well as complications and exploitation that occurred gave rise to new agencies and a series of laws that promoted adoption rather than indenture.[49] By 1945, adoption was formulated as a legal act with consideration of the child’s best interests. The origin of the move toward secrecy and the sealing of all adoption and birth records began when Charles Loring Brace introduced the concept to prevent children from the orphan trains from returning to or being reclaimed by their parents.[50]

Notable contemporary instances of child abandonment include homicidal neglect by confinement of infants or children such as in the affair of the Osaka child abandonment case or the affair of two abandoned children in Calgary, Alberta, Canada by their mother Rie Fujii.

Current situation[edit]

A modern Baby box or Baby hatch in the Czech Republic where a baby can be anonymously abandoned while ensuring that the child will be cared for.

Today, abandonment of a child is considered to be a serious crime in many jurisdictions because it can be considered malum in se (wrong in itself) due to the direct harm to the child, and because of welfare concerns (in that the child often becomes a ward of the state). For example, in the U.S. state of Georgia, it is a misdemeanor to willfully and voluntarily abandon a child, and a felony to abandon one’s child and leave the state. In 1981, this distinction was upheld as constitutional by the U.S. Supreme Court against a parent’s argument that it denied parents the right to travel and thereby denied parents the equal protection of the laws.[51] ‘Rehoming’ is still legal in Arkansas where, in 2015, state legislator Justin Harris made national headlines by rehoming two young adopted children.[52]

Many jurisdictions have exceptions to abandonment laws in the form of safe haven laws, which apply to babies left in designated places such as hospitals (see, for example, baby hatch).

In the UK abandoning a child under the age of two years is a criminal offence.[53] In 2004 49 babies were abandoned nationwide with slightly more boys than girls being abandoned.[53]

Abandonment is rife in Malaysia, where between 2005 and 2011, 517 babies were dumped. Of those 517 children, 287 were found dead. In 2012, there were 31 cases, including at least one instance of a child being tossed from a window of a high rise apartment.[54]

Persons in cultures with poor social welfare systems who are not financially capable of taking care of a child are more likely to abandon them. Several American states are moving towards passing legislation to prevent rehoming of children post adoption. However, national legislation may be needed to protect children from being rehomed in all states.[55]

State programs for facilitating anonymous child abandonment[edit]

  • Anonymous Birthing allows pregnant mothers to give birth to their child without revealing their identity or claiming any ownership over or legal obligation to the child. Different countries wait varying lengths of time from 2–8 weeks before putting the child up for adoption to allow mothers to return to the hospital and reclaim the child. Anonymous birthing is most often implemented as measure to prevent neonaticide and has been successful in multiple countries.[13] Police in Austria report a 57% drop in neonaticides after the country passed a law allowing for anonymous birthing and free delivery in 2001.[56] Anonymous birthing provides the opportunity for mothers to disclose relevant health history to later be shared with the child and adoptive family, as well as access to hospital care to reduce risk during birth. In some states, France for example, mothers who choose anonymous birthing undergo counselling and are informed of available support structures to help them keep the child. Mothers who are seeking to anonymously abandon their child at birth may avoid anonymous birthing due to increased interaction with hospital staff and the possibility of undergoing counselling.
  • Baby boxes provide a safe and anonymous way to abandon children, typically newborns, rather than resorting to infant exposure or neonaticide. Baby boxes can be found in Austria, Belgium, Czech Republic, Germany, Hungary, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Portugal, Slovakia, South Korea, and the United States. Advantages of baby boxes include a greater degree of anonymity for parents abandoning their children and a guarantee that the child will be found and attended to. However, children are sometimes placed in baby boxes with existing issue or injury and baby boxes are under-utilized and costly to operate. It is also debated if baby boxes are an accessible option for rural mothers who may not be willing to travel to abandon their children.[13]
  • Safe haven laws allow parents of a child, typically a newborn child but age can vary, to abandon the child at a place of local authority such as a hospital, fire station, or police station with no further question. Some states allow the parent to reclaim the child within a certain timeframe. Safe Haven Laws passed in the United States in 1999 and have since been adopted in Canada, Japan, France, and Slovakia. It is debated if safe haven laws prevent child abandonment or neonaticide. As with baby boxes, one study suggests that mothers in rural areas are not willing to travel to abandon their children and would not be willing to travel to a hospital to do so.[13] As of 2017, 3,317 babies have been surrendered via safe haven laws in the United States.[57]

National law and effects on child abandonment[edit]

China’s One Child Policy:
In 1979 China introduced its one-child policy which set up penalties for families that chose to have more than one child.[58] Women were compelled to undergo a surgical implantation of an IUD following the birth of their first child and tubal ligation if they were to have another child.[58] Families that disobeyed the law were levied a fine and lost their right to many government services, including access to health and educational services.[59] Nevertheless, transgressions of the law most certainly occurred.[59] Consequently, over the course of over three decades, hundreds of thousands of children, the majority of which were girls, were abandoned and required caretaking.[59] Non-governmental organizations stepped in to assist with the re-housing of these girls, leading to the international adoption of over 120,000 Chinese children.[60] Today, China’s fertility rate has not quite returned to the rate of replacement (the birth rate that will maintain population size under conditions of zero net immigration/emigration). In fact, in the years since the relinquishing of the policy, China’s fertility rate has only risen .04 per family.[61]

Vietnam War:
During and following the Vietnam War, initiated by the Kennedy and Johnson administrations due to a fear of the spread of communism into southeastern Asia, it is estimated that roughly 50,000 babies were born of American fathers and Vietnamese mothers.[62] A large contingent of these children were either unwanted to the circumstances of their conception or unable to be cared for due to the lack of available resources and assistance in the war-torn country.[59] Locally, these children were known as «children of the dust.»[62] Operation Babylift was established by the US government in an effort to bring over 3,300 children, many but not all of whom were abandoned, orphaned, or mixed-race leading to fears of their exploitation, to Western countries to be adopted with varying degrees of success. Non-governmental organizations attempted to alleviate the problem by setting up international adoptions and other rehoming methods but were largely ineffective. To this day, attempts are being made to link American veterans to children that they may have fathered during their time in Vietnam as well as children to their families in Vietnam.[62]

Romania under Nicolae Ceaușescu:
During the rule of Communist politician Nicolae Ceaușescu, Romania underwent drastic changes to its populace. Ceaușescu, in an attempt to form a robust and young population, outlawed methods of contraception and encouraged the creation of large families with many children.[59] Much like during the Fascist period of Italian history, incentives and cultural praise were offered to parents who produced many children.[63] Ceaușescu established Decree 770 which outlawed abortion and contraception for all women, except those who were over 40, had already born 4–5 children, had life-threatening complications during pregnancy, or who became pregnant through rape or incest.[63] In the following years, Romania’s birth rate nearly doubled.[64] However, due to a lack of resources necessary to care for the abundance of children, thousands were abandoned or left to die. Other women resorted to unsafe forms of abortion carried out by people without medical training.[59] The problem persisted until the coup that overthrew Ceaușescu in 1989. Following the coup, Romania’s birthrate steadily declined for the following decades.[65] Today, the birth rate has dropped to 1.52 births per woman, under the rate of replacement.[65]

In literature[edit]

Foundlings, who may be orphans, can combine many advantages to a plot: mysterious antecedents, leading to plots to discover them; high birth and lowly upbringing. Foundlings have appeared in literature in some of the oldest known tales.[66] The most common reasons for abandoning children in literature are oracles that the child will cause harm; the mother’s desire to conceal her illegitimate child, often after rape by a god; or spite on the part of people other than the parents, such as sisters and mothers-in-law in such fairy tales as The Dancing Water, the Singing Apple, and the Speaking Bird. In some chivalric romances, such as Le Fresne and the Swan-Children, in the variant Beatrix, some children of a multiple birth are abandoned after the heroine has taunted another woman with a claim that such a birth is proof of adultery and then suffered such a birth of her own.[67] Poverty usually features as a cause only with the case of older children, who can survive on their own. Indeed, most such individuals are of royal or noble birth; their abandonment means they grow up in ignorance of their true social status.[68]

Abandonment[edit]

One of the earliest surviving examples of child abandonment in literature is that of Oedipus, who is left to die as a baby in the hills by a herdsman ordered to kill the baby, but is found and grows up to unwittingly marry his biological mother.

In a common variant on the abandonment and rediscovery of an infant, the biblical story of Moses describes how the Jewish infant is abandoned by his mother and set to float in the Nile in a reed basket, in hopes that he will be found and nurtured; as planned, the child is discovered and adopted by the queen of Egypt, thus gaining a higher social status and better education, as well as a more powerful position than his birth family could have given him. A similar story is told of other heroes who eventually learn about their true origins only as adults, when they find they are able to save their original parents or family by wielding power from their adoptive status, while making use of an education that sets them apart from their peers. The theme is also carried through in the case of many modern superheroes, most famously Superman (see Modern Media below). Mark Twain tweaks the traditional «upgrading» of the foundling’s social status by having the child’s twin, who is powerful by birth, experience the «downgrading » of his position in a switch planned by the two children, in «The Prince and the Pauper».

In many tales, such as Snow White, the child is actually abandoned by a servant who had been given orders to put the child to death. Other tales such as Hansel and Gretel has children reluctantly abandoned in the forest by their parents since they were no longer able to feed them.

Children are often abandoned with birth tokens, which act as plot devices to ensure that the child can be identified. This theme is a main element in Angelo F. Coniglio’s historical fiction novella The Lady of the Wheel, in which the title refers to a «receiver of foundlings» who were placed in a device called a «foundling wheel», in the wall of a church or hospital.[69]

In Shakespeare’s The Winter’s Tale, a recognition scene in the final act reveals by these that Perdita is a king’s daughter rather than a shepherdess, and so suitable for her prince lover.[70] Similarly, when the heroine of Le Fresne reveals the brocade and the ring she was abandoned with, her mother and sister recognize her; this makes her a suitable bride for the man whose mistress she had been.[71]

The children of Queen Blondine and of her sister, Princess Brunette, picked up by a Corsair after seven days at sea; illustration by Walter Crane to the fairy tale Princess Belle-Etoile.

From Oedipus onward, Greek and Roman tales are filled with exposed children who escaped death to be reunited with their families—usually, as in Longus’ Daphnis and Chloe, more happily than in Oedipus’ case. Grown children, having been taken up by strangers, were usually recognized by tokens that had been left with the exposed baby: In Euripides’s Ion, Creüsa is about to kill Ion, believing him to be her husband’s illegitimate child, when a priestess reveals the birth-tokens that show that Ion is her own, abandoned infant.

This may reflect the widespread practice of child abandonment in their cultures. On the other hand, the motif is continued through literature where the practice is not widespread. William Shakespeare used the abandonment and discovery of Perdita in The Winter’s Tale, as noted above, and Edmund Spenser reveals in the last Canto of Book 6 of The Faerie Queene that the character Pastorella, raised by shepherds, is in fact of noble birth. Henry Fielding, in one of the first novels recognized as such, recounted The History of Tom Jones, a Foundling. In the case of Quasimodo, the eponymous character in Victor Hugo’s The Hunchback of Notre-Dame, the disfigured child is abandoned at the cathedral’s foundling’s bed, made available for the leaving of unwanted infants. Ruth Benedict, in studying the Zuni, found that the practice of child abandonment was unknown, but featured heavily in their folktales.[72]

Still, even cultures that do not practice it may reflect older customs; in medieval literature, such as Sir Degaré and Le Fresne, the child is abandoned immediately after birth, which may reflect pre-Christian practices, both Scandavian and Roman, that the newborn would not be raised without the father’s decision to do so.[73]

Upbringing[edit]

The strangers who take up the child are often shepherds or other herdsmen. This befell not only Oedipus, but also Cyrus II of Persia, Amphion and Zethus and several of the characters listed above. Romulus and Remus were suckled by a wolf in the wilderness, but afterward, again found by a shepherd. This ties this motif in with the genre of the pastoral. This can imply or outright state that the child benefits by this pure upbringing by unspoiled people, as opposed to the corruption that surrounded his birth family.

Often, the child is aided by animals before being found; Artemis sent a bear to nurse the abandoned Atalanta, and Paris was also nursed by a bear before being found.[74] In some cases, the child is depicted as being raised by animals; however, in actuality, feral children have proven to be incapable of speech.[75]

In adulthood[edit]

The pattern of a child remaining with its adoptive parents is less common than the reverse, but it occurs. In the Indian epic Mahabharata, Karna is never reconciled with his mother, and dies in battle with her legitimate son. In the Grimm fairy tale Foundling-Bird, Foundling Bird never learns of, least of all reunites with, his parents. George Eliot depicted the abandonment of the character Eppie in Silas Marner; despite learning her true father at the end of the book, she refuses to leave Silas Marner, who had actually reared her.

When the cause of the abandonment is a prophecy, the abandonment is usually instrumental in causing the prophecy to be fulfilled. Besides Oedipus, Greek legends also included Telephus, who was prophesied to kill his uncle; his ignorance of his parentage, stemming from his abandonment, caused his uncle to jeer at him and him to kill the uncle in anger.

Older children[edit]

When older children are abandoned in fairy tales, while poverty may be cited as a cause, as in Hop o’ My Thumb, also called Thumbelina, the most common effect is when poverty is combined with a stepmother’s malice, as in Hansel and Gretel (or sometimes, a mother’s malice). The stepmother’s wishes may be the sole cause, as in Father Frost. In these stories, the children seldom find adoptive parents, but malicious monsters, such as ogres and witches;[76] outwitting them, they find treasure enough to solve their poverty. The stepmother may die coincidentally, or be driven out by the father when he hears, so that the reunited family can live happily in her absence.

In a grimmer variation, the tale Babes in the Wood features a wicked uncle in the role of the wicked stepmother, who gives an order for the children to be killed. However, although the servants scruple to obey him, and the children are abandoned in the woods, the tale ends tragically: the children die, and their bodies are covered with leaves by robins.

In modern media[edit]

Foundlings still appear in modern literature; this is a partial list of examples:

  • In George Bernard Shaw’s stage play Major Barbara, industrialist Andrew Undershaft, a foundling himself, intently searches for a foundling to assume the family business.
  • Superman may be seen as a continuation of the foundling tradition, the lone survivor of an advanced (but almost-completely extinct) civilization who is found and raised by Kansas farmers in a pastoral setting, and later discovers his alien origins and uses his powers for good.[77]
  • Charlie Chaplin’s movie The Kid revolves about the Tramp’s efforts to raise an abandoned child.
  • In the graphic novel Aqua Leung, the main protagonist is a prince who is whisked out of a castle under attack in a basket-like device and then found by a couple and raised on land so that his father’s enemies do not find him. He returns to the seas to fulfill the prophecy thought to be his father’s but that was actually his.
  • Elora Danan, in the film Willow, and Lir, in the novel The Last Unicorn, both continue the tradition of foundlings abandoned because of prophecies, and who fulfil the prophecies because of their abandonment.
  • In the last book of The Chronicles of Prydain, Dallben reveals to the hero Taran that he is a foundling; in a story set in the same world, «The Foundling,» Dallben himself proves to be a foundling as well.
  • The protagonist Thorby of Robert A. Heinlein’s 1957 novel Citizen of the Galaxy is a foundling sold as a slave on a remote planet. He is bought and freed by a beggar who educates and inspires him, then learns from multiple kind foster families. He later discovers that his parents were killed for opposing slavery in the galactic conglomerate that they owned and that he inherits, and he carries on their work.
  • The character Leela from Futurama was a foundling, given to the Ophanarium and a note in an alien language to make people believe that she was an alien rather than a mutant; she would have been forced, in the latter case, to live in the sewers with the other mutants.
  • Several foundlings appear in Terry Pratchett’s Discworld: most notably Captain Carrot Ironfoundersson, who was found, as a toddler, among the ruins of a caravan party that had been attacked by bandits, and was then surrounded by the bodies of the adults.
  • The character of Mozzie, from White Collar, is a foundling, left in a basket with only a bear.
  • In some cartoons, wily characters may disguise themselves as foundlings. This may be accomplished by the character dressing as a baby and lying in a bassinet or basket on a doorstep, perhaps with a note adding to the ruse. This was parodied in the 2006 movie Little Man.
  • In The Flintstones, Bamm-Bamm was abandoned on the Rubbles’s doorstep and eventually adopted by them.

See also[edit]

  • Abandoned child syndrome
  • Abandonment (emotional)
  • Barrel children
  • Borderline personality disorder
  • Coin-operated-locker babies
  • Feral child
  • Lost boys (polygamy)
  • Myling
  • Project Cuddle
  • Safe-haven law
  • Street children
  • Unintended pregnancy
  • Baby hatch
  • Foundling hospital

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  65. ^ a b «Romania – Birth Rate». Index Mundi.
  66. ^ Northrop Frye, Anatomy of Criticism, p. 198. ISBN 0-691-01298-9.
  67. ^ Laura A. Hibbard (1963). Medieval Romance in England, p. 242. New York: Burt Franklin[ISBN missing]
  68. ^ Josepha Sherman, Once upon a Galaxy, pp. 55–56. ISBN 0-87483-387-6.
  69. ^ Cipolla, Gaetano. «The Lady of the Wheel (La Ruotaia)». Legas.
  70. ^ Northrop Frye, «Recognition in The Winter’s Tale,» pp. 108–109 of Fables of Identity: Studies in Poetic Mythology. ISBN 0-15-629730-2.
  71. ^ Francis James Child, The English and Scottish Popular Ballads, v. 2, p. 68. Dover Publications, New York, 1965.
  72. ^ Maria Tatar, The Hard Facts of the Grimms’ Fairy Tales, p. 60. ISBN 0-691-06722-8.
  73. ^ Barbara A. Hanawalt, The Ties That Bound: Peasant Families in Medieval England, p. 172. ISBN 0-19-504564-5.
  74. ^ Jane Yolen, Touch Magic, p. 73. ISBN 0-87483-591-7.
  75. ^ Jane Yolen, Touch Magic, p. 74. ISBN 0-87483-591-7.
  76. ^ Jack Zipes, The Great Fairy Tale Tradition: From Straparola and Basile to the Brothers Grimm, p. 474. ISBN 0-393-97636-X.
  77. ^ Josepha Sherman, Once upon a Galaxy, p. 55. ISBN 0-87483-387-6.

Further reading[edit]

  • Dorothy L. Sayers. Oedipus Simplex: Freedom and Fate in Folklore and Fiction[ISBN missing]

External links[edit]

  • John Boswell, «The kindness of strangers: the abandonment of children in Western Europe from late antiquity to the Renaissance», 1998, ISBN 0-226-06712-2
  • «Full Story». the Namibian. Retrieved 30 November 2012.
  • Angelo F. Coniglio’s treatise on foundlings

1.
Due to controversy over the issues and
debates that hospital babies have
sparked, besides our own reporting The Moscow News has decided to
publish an official statement from the Health Ministry, in its own
words, about the scope of the
problem and how it is addressing it:

2.
Pursuant to the existing normative documents of the Russian
Federation’s Ministry of Public
Health and Social Development, babies left
without parental care will be sent to children’s homes of the public
health system.

3.
Children received from maternity homes, families and hospitals will
be sent directly to a quarantine (isolation) department, where the
necessary medical, health-improving and
educational activities are conducted with
due regard paid to the children’s ages.

4.
Children
suffering from severe infectious or skin
diseases and other diseases requiring hospital treatment will not be
placed in a children’s
home. Children left without parental
care must stay in a hospital for medical
and not social reasons.

5.
However, according to data for late 2006 from
the Russian regions, there is evidence that 280 children (of
different ages) left without
parental care were kept in hospitals without
medical reasons for a period of eight days
to two months. That was due to lengthy
preparation
of the necessary legal documents and to a lack of accommodation in
the educational system’s boarding houses and in a number of
children’s homes.

6.
Registration of children in a children’s home requires, in addition
to medical documents,
papers confirming the absence of parents
or the inability of the parents to bring up
their children: A certificate of death of the parents
(or of the mother), the relevant ruling of a law court, a paper
certifying abandonment of the baby by the parents, the parents’
written
consent to the adoption of the child by someone (their renunciation
of their parental
rights), etc.

Лексика

В заданиях Л1 –
Л3 установите соответствие между
английскими и русскими терминами.
Запишите в бланке ответов.

Л1

1) rural social work

2) psychiatric social work

3) occupational social
work

4) police social work

5) preventive social work

6) medical social work

7) school social work

8) gerontological social
work

9) clinical social work

10) industrial social work

a)
социальная работа по месту занятости

b)
клиническая социальная работа

c)
превентивная социальная работа

d)
психиатрическая социальная работа

e)
социальная работа в полиции

f)
социальная работа в сельской местности.

g)
социальная работа в школе

h)
социальная работа на производстве

i)
геронтологическая
социальная
работа

j)социальная
работа в медицинских учреждениях

Л2

1)
absolute
poverty

2)
primary
poverty

3)
relative
poverty

4)
secondary
poverty

5) poverty datum line

a)
вторичная бедность

b)
относительная бедность

c)
первичная бедность

d)
горячая
линия

e)
прожиточный
минимум

f)
абсолютная бедность

Л3

  1. runaway children

  2. exceptional children

  3. adultified children

  4. stolen children

  5. latchkey children

  1. исключительные
    дети

  2. украденные дети

  3. дети-инвалиды

  4. дети-беглецы

  5. дети, проводящие
    часть дня без присмотра взрослых

  6. дети, несущие
    обязанности, характерные для взрослых
    людей

В заданиях Л4 –
Л6 выберите синоним к подчеркнутому
термину. Запишите в бланке ответов его
номер.

Л4

psychiatric
social work:
1.
hospital social work

2. independent social work

3. clinical social work

Л5

occupational
social

work: 1.
industrial social work

2. international social work

3. voluntary social work

Л6

poverty
datum line:
1.
standard of living

2. minimum standard of living

3. standard of well-being

В заданиях Л7 –
Л10 выберите правильный термин к данному
определению. Запишите в бланке ответов
его номер.

Л7

1.

street
work…

…is
oriented to helping people who live in agricultural areas.

2.

rural social work…

3.

youth social work …

Л8

1.

medical
social worker

… works closely with
families and children to identify their needs.

2.

family
support
worker

3.

school
social worker

Л9

1.

relative poverty …

… is used to demonstrate
the poverty by referring to the cultural needs.

2.

absolute poverty …

3.

primary poverty …

Л10

1.

drug
abuse

… is a
disorder related to the unhealthy use of alcohol or drugs.

2.

substance abuse

3.

alcohol abuse …

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