Adoptive Children: How Cargo Is Sold Abroad at a Unit Price
2 Articles
2 Articles
Cristian (47) and Rodrigo (45) had been together for 16 years when they decided that they wanted to form a family. “We wanted to share our happiness, expand the love we had,” says Cristian. They did not seek to bring up biological children or resort to assisted reproduction techniques. They chose adoption. But in Chile in 2019, to achieve this, they had to make a decision: annul their Civil Union Agreement so that one of the two could appear as …
At the turn of the millennium, international adoptions were booming, but many adoptive children were victims of traffickers. In Europe and countries of origin such as Chile or South Korea, painful treatment is now beginning.
Coverage Details
Bias Distribution
- 50% of the sources lean Left, 50% of the sources lean Right
To view factuality data please Upgrade to Premium