TY - JOUR
T1 - In TheIr BesT InTeresTs Diplomacy, Ethics, and Competition in the French World of Adoption
AU - Roux, Sébastien
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2020. The Institute of French Studies at New York University. All Rights Reserved.
PY - 2020/12/1
Y1 - 2020/12/1
N2 - The international circulation of children requires a multiplicity of interventions. Adoptive flows must respect the ethical standards defined by the Hague Convention (1993) and be realized in the context of a drastic contraction of the migration of children for adoptive purposes. For a dozen years, the French government has been following a partially contradictory double imperative: the moral respect of universal principles enacted by international treaties, and the political maintenance of France among the adoptive “great nations” that are able to favor its nationals. Based on a multi-site field study, this contribution aims to shed light on the architec ture, discourse, and actions of these “adoptive public agents.” Drawing on interviews and observations conducted in France and abroad, this article describes how bureaucrats act in practice to create French adoptive families, at the blurred and troubled intersection between the promotion of universal children's rights and the favoring of French national interests.
AB - The international circulation of children requires a multiplicity of interventions. Adoptive flows must respect the ethical standards defined by the Hague Convention (1993) and be realized in the context of a drastic contraction of the migration of children for adoptive purposes. For a dozen years, the French government has been following a partially contradictory double imperative: the moral respect of universal principles enacted by international treaties, and the political maintenance of France among the adoptive “great nations” that are able to favor its nationals. Based on a multi-site field study, this contribution aims to shed light on the architec ture, discourse, and actions of these “adoptive public agents.” Drawing on interviews and observations conducted in France and abroad, this article describes how bureaucrats act in practice to create French adoptive families, at the blurred and troubled intersection between the promotion of universal children's rights and the favoring of French national interests.
KW - bureaucracy
KW - diplomacy
KW - ethics
KW - public policy
KW - transnational adoption
U2 - 10.3167/FPCS.2020.380304
DO - 10.3167/FPCS.2020.380304
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85099971790
SN - 1537-6370
VL - 38
SP - 64
EP - 85
JO - French Politics, Culture and Society
JF - French Politics, Culture and Society
IS - 3
ER -