The life of a child needs to be stable. The process of growing up, for anyone, is far from simple, and when complications beyond the ordinary are added it only makes things more difficult. There can be no denying that even in the most stable democracy with a wealthy population, growing up can be fraught with difficulties. So in nations like China, where there is a law limiting families to one child, the prospective difficulties are multiplied. If a child is conceived and carried to term there is a very real chance of it being put up for adoption, especially if it is a girl. Consequently there is an additional complication that confuses the life of a Chinese child. The added complication in the life of someone so young is not a welcome occurrence.

Naturally, because of the one child policy, adoption inside China is, if not rare, less common than elsewhere. The law as it is does not prevent every Chinese couple from having more than one child, but prevents more than one child per family in urban areas. There is an exception to the policy for parents who have no siblings themselves and also for ethnic minorities. Nonetheless there is a continuing policy of discouraging mass breeding in China, and as a result a lot of children are put up for adoption. As the one child policy makes their chances of being adopted by a domestic family more remote, they need to rely on adoption from abroad – which these days increasingly means adoption by an American family.

Charities like Chinese Children Adoption International are helping US-based families to adopt a Chinese child. Of the thousands of Chinese children adopted by American families each year 8000, in total have been arranged by CCAI — giving these children an amazing opportunity to grow up among a family which would have been denied them otherwise. The Chinese government, which maintains the one child policy through fear of overcrowding in a nation of more than a billion people, is keen to aid the cause of families looking to adopt, and now very gladly works with CCAI to enable the adoption of children who have been abandoned, orphaned or put up for adoption from a Chinese family who may have fallen foul of the policy.

The existence of groups like CCAI is something which makes the entire situation a lot more manageable for all involved. They are able to vet the adopting family to ensure that their home environment is an adequate place in which to bring up a child, and judge the compatibility of a child and a family. They also enable the potential adopters to make their way through what often seems to be a maze of paperwork, as well as liasing with the government to ensure that the children are going to good homes. It is a service that is more than worth its weight in gold for the adoptive parents and especially the children, for whom an already complicated life is made at least somewhat simpler.

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