Archive for the ‘Adoptees’ Category

Adoption Support for Families and Children Inc: Peak Body Intercountry Adoption Nominations

Monday, August 20th, 2007

ASFC are currently seeking Intercountry Adult Adoptees from Western Australia to nominate for the Intercountry Adoption  Peak Body. For further details, please refer to information below or contact Sonya Mahoney.

Peak Body Intercountry Adoption Nominations

 As some of you may be aware one of the recommendations of the Bishop Inquiry into Overseas Adoption was that that a peak body consisting of Non Government Organisations (NGOs), adoptees and professionals be convened by the Federal Attorney Generals Dept.  Finally we are at the stage of nominations, they close 17th September.   Adoption Support for Families and Children (ASFC),  formally Australia for Children and prior to that ASIAC WA is the only parent run adoption support group in WA, our membership though large does not include all families and adoptees through Intercountry Adoption (ICA) in Western Australia, we would like to nominate an Intercountry adult adoptee to be one of WA’s representatives. 

The commitment would be 3 - 4 meetings a year involving travel interstate paid for by the Commonwealth please read attached information sheet.  WA’s Department of Child Protection Adoption Service does not have an ICA consultative forum, however ASFC does meet regularly with DCP, and we are meeting to forward nominations on 28th August. 

If you would like to consider yourself available for nomination you can do so directly by nominating directly to the AG’s Department,  ASFC would also like to put forward a nomination from a WA Intercountry Adoptee .  

If you are interested please get back to us on info@asfc.info or you can call me on 9272 9156 to discuss further by the Monday 27th August.  You would need to complete a short resume to go with the nomination.  The peak body will hopefully be ongoing so the opportunity is for over time the wider ICA community to be involved.

Please forward this to other Intercountry adoptees you know.

Regards,

Sonya Mahoney

on behalf of Committee

Adoption Support for Families and Children Inc

www.asfc.info

Perth callout

Sunday, August 19th, 2007

Korean adult adoptees in Perth (Western Australia) interested in a social networking meetup are encouraged to contact Pia.

NoPAK - KBS Connection: Birth Family Search Opportunity

Sunday, August 19th, 2007

Earlier this month, the Network of Professional Adopted Koreans (NoPAK) announced a direct connection had been made with the producers of KBS, a Korean television program which showcases adopted Koreans searching for biological parents and family members. NoPAK will be providing producers with a list of members who would like to be featured on the show.

Korean adoptees searching for their biological family and are willing to tell their adoption story are encouraged to join NoPAK and take advantage of this opportunity.

More information can be found on the NoPAK forums.

Negotiating your identity as a Korean adoptee

Sunday, August 19th, 2007

University of Newcastle PhD student Jessica Walton is exploring the unique experiences of Korean adoptees affected by being adopted to another country.

After being adopted to the United States in 1983 at the age of eight months, Jessica returned to South Korea in 2004 to teach English in Korean public schools.

Jessica said she was confronted with issues about what it meant to her to be Korean by birth, but grow up in America.

“I began to question the significance of where home is and what it means to belong,” she said.

“I wanted to know what other Korean adoptees felt about these ideas and so I decided to make sense of these issues through research.”

Jessica is researching the processes and experiences involved in being a Korean adoptee from an anthropological perspective, through the School of Humanities and Social Science.

She is looking for South Korean adoptees, aged 18 to 50 years, to participate in her research through email interviews.

“I’m looking at how adoptees consider their identities, how they view where they belong and where they feel their home is,” she said.

“I’ve found that Korean adoptees explore art, film, poetry and academic research to express themselves and identify with their birth country in diverse and challenging ways.

“As part of my research, I’ll travel to Seoul in South Korea next month, where I’ll interview Korean adoptees about their experiences in Korea.”

Intercountry adoption is now the most common form of adoption in Australia, following a decline in the number of Australian-born babies available for adoption in the past few years.

Anyone interested in participating in Jessica’s research can contact her via email on Jessica.Walton@studentmail.newcastle.edu.au

Call for Vounteers

Thursday, October 19th, 2006

Jinny Hyun-Jin Kim is a Korean studying in the United States as a graduate student of Virginia Commonwealth University majoring in graphic design.

He is working on a thesis project about how adopted Koreans can commincated effectively their life experiences and stories in visual forms.

This thesis project is to understand Adopted Koreans better and enhance perceptions of adopted koreans. The final form of the thesis project would be a visual documentation of the collective experiences or stories. As a research process, Jinny Hyun-Jin Kim is looking for volunteers willing to have an interview or respond to my questionnaire by email or mail.

Jinny Hyun-Jin Kim can be contacted at liebe1118@hotmail.com