L’adoption et les politiques de l’enfance et de la jeunesse

Research Framework: For the past fourteen years, I have been thinking about the issue of adoption in Brazil, with the city of Rio de Janeiro as a privileged field of study. As I was focusing on the meaning of kinship, its social and legal implications, the Euro-American conception of kinship (Strath...

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Main Author: Alessandra Rinaldi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Centre Urbanisation Culture Société (UCS) de l'INRS 2024-12-01
Series:Enfances, Familles, Générations
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/efg/21256
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author Alessandra Rinaldi
author_facet Alessandra Rinaldi
author_sort Alessandra Rinaldi
collection DOAJ
description Research Framework: For the past fourteen years, I have been thinking about the issue of adoption in Brazil, with the city of Rio de Janeiro as a privileged field of study. As I was focusing on the meaning of kinship, its social and legal implications, the Euro-American conception of kinship (Strathern, 2015) and its moral injunctions, I began to ponder the meaning of a child and youth policy, its relationship with adoption and with the practices of the Brazilian child and adolescent justice system. Objectives: My objective is to examine how the reflexive posture that is fundamental to social sciences can modify research trajectories, and how ethnographic experiences in the field are likely to produce effects on researchers and respondents. Methodology: In this article, I discuss the changes in my adoption research trajectory that are linked to my commitment. Results: To do so, I focus on my ethnographic experiences in adoption support groups and at children and youth protection courts, and how they affected me (Favret-Saada, 1990), triggering - in myself and my research - a change of perspective. I also address some of the contexts surrounding the restitution of research data. Conclusion: Anthropological research unfolds in the midst of doubt, uncertainty and the fear of being “conquered” or “delighted” by our interlocutors, or even of being hated by them. We must therefore look for a path between autonomy and commitment.Contribution: The various ways in which data can be returned to the people studied can open up a field of possibilities for cooperative work in the effective register of a committed anthropology.
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spelling doaj-art-7f0ab1d6a7aa481e82a21ae5dfbf783f2025-08-20T02:16:05ZengCentre Urbanisation Culture Société (UCS) de l'INRSEnfances, Familles, Générations1708-63102024-12-0147L’adoption et les politiques de l’enfance et de la jeunesseAlessandra RinaldiResearch Framework: For the past fourteen years, I have been thinking about the issue of adoption in Brazil, with the city of Rio de Janeiro as a privileged field of study. As I was focusing on the meaning of kinship, its social and legal implications, the Euro-American conception of kinship (Strathern, 2015) and its moral injunctions, I began to ponder the meaning of a child and youth policy, its relationship with adoption and with the practices of the Brazilian child and adolescent justice system. Objectives: My objective is to examine how the reflexive posture that is fundamental to social sciences can modify research trajectories, and how ethnographic experiences in the field are likely to produce effects on researchers and respondents. Methodology: In this article, I discuss the changes in my adoption research trajectory that are linked to my commitment. Results: To do so, I focus on my ethnographic experiences in adoption support groups and at children and youth protection courts, and how they affected me (Favret-Saada, 1990), triggering - in myself and my research - a change of perspective. I also address some of the contexts surrounding the restitution of research data. Conclusion: Anthropological research unfolds in the midst of doubt, uncertainty and the fear of being “conquered” or “delighted” by our interlocutors, or even of being hated by them. We must therefore look for a path between autonomy and commitment.Contribution: The various ways in which data can be returned to the people studied can open up a field of possibilities for cooperative work in the effective register of a committed anthropology.https://journals.openedition.org/efg/21256adoptiontrajectoriesresearchjustice system
spellingShingle Alessandra Rinaldi
L’adoption et les politiques de l’enfance et de la jeunesse
Enfances, Familles, Générations
adoption
trajectories
research
justice system
title L’adoption et les politiques de l’enfance et de la jeunesse
title_full L’adoption et les politiques de l’enfance et de la jeunesse
title_fullStr L’adoption et les politiques de l’enfance et de la jeunesse
title_full_unstemmed L’adoption et les politiques de l’enfance et de la jeunesse
title_short L’adoption et les politiques de l’enfance et de la jeunesse
title_sort l adoption et les politiques de l enfance et de la jeunesse
topic adoption
trajectories
research
justice system
url https://journals.openedition.org/efg/21256
work_keys_str_mv AT alessandrarinaldi ladoptionetlespolitiquesdelenfanceetdelajeunesse