Episode 173 - Historic Adoption Policy with Dr Michael Lambert

The Adoption and Fostering Podcast - A podcast by Al Coates & Scott Casson-Rennie

Categories:

Scott and Al are having a week off! both taking a pause after a busy year and before a busy autumn. So, rather than do nothing we're re releasing a cracking episode from last year that is well worth a revisit.    In this episode we speak to NHS historian Dr Michael Lambert. He has looked at the historic evidence of Government policy to promote and facilitate removal of children from mothers in the post war period. We discuss this as well as the move towards a formal apology from the government as well as from other players in the system at that time. The conversation is revelatory and puts into perspective  and questions the idea that adoption was solely driven by society.  Certainly, as a topic it places contemporary adoption in context as well as considering how modern practice still echoes the historical  roots of adoption.  The links below will take you to written work, evidence  Michael's letter to the movement for an adoption apology: The birth mother and the evolution of adoption policy and practice in England since 1926 by Dr Jatinder Sandhu Letter to the Movement for an adoption apology The right to family life: adoption of children of unmarried women 1949-1976 As always if you’ve experience of adoption, fostering or special guardianship from any perspective personal or professional and would like share that on the podcast please get in touch through the Facebook page, twitter or email us at [email protected] Listen/subscribe on iTunes here Spotify here Google here