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Home > How Many Children Were Adopted in 2000 and 2001? > How Many Children Were Adopted in 2000 and 2001?: Highlights
How Many Children Were Adopted in 2000 and 2001?
Numbers and Trends
Highlights The purpose of this report is to estimate the number of children adopted in each of the States for 2000 and 2001 and to use these numbers to estimate the composition and trends of all adoptions in the United States. Key findings are summarized below.
No one agency is charged with collecting data on adoptions. The National Center for State Courts' (NCSC's) Court Statistics Project collects data by calendar year (which most States use) and State fiscal years for the total number of adoptions processed through courts. Exhibit 1
NCSC's figures are incomplete, however, for several reasons. Some parents who adopt in foreign countries choose not to file in a U.S. court. While all domestic adoptions are finalized in U.S. courts, adoptions are such a small percentage of court caseloads that they are sometimes included in a larger category, such as "other civil petitions," and cannot be separated from other civil petitions. Three other sources of adoption information provide numbers of adoptions by type: the Federal Adoption and Foster Care Analysis and Reporting System (AFCARS), the State Department, and the Office of Immigration Statistics within the Department of Homeland Security. AFCARS provides data on adoptions through public agencies, and the State Department and the Office of Immigration Statistics provide the number of visas issued for intercountry adoption. There is no overlap between the AFCARS data and the data provided by the Department of State and the Department of Homeland Security. Other data sources are inconsistent in terms of reporting period and population reported and are not mutually exclusive. The number of adoptions in the third category—private agency, kinship, or tribal—can be approximated by subtracting the AFCARS and intercountry adoption numbers from the total adoptions reported by courts. The result is an approximation, but any difference due to gaps and overlap among counts from the three types is probably only slight.
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