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Psychology of Orphans
Psychology of Orphans
Psychology of Orphans
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Psychology of Orphans

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Psychology of Orphans is written by Dr. Lyudmila Shipitsyna Rector of the Institute of Special Education and Psychology Saint-Petersburg, Russia. She has a Doctorate in Science and Biology and works as an honored professor in this specialty in the Russian Federation. Considered an expert and pioneer in this field in Russia, she has authored over 400 publications. Today these books have formed the foundation in teaching on special education within Russia and beyond. Psychology of Orphans is the combination of written theory with the clinical practice and experience of dealing with orphans, adoptions and families.

Psychology of Orphans was written as a resource book for students, researchers, academics and professionals. Those who work with orphans and families with special needs children affected by social and psychological problems will find Psychology of Orphans invaluable.

Any potential adoptive parent needs to know the research and conclusions that Psychology of Orphans reveals. Question on children's behaviors and actions are answered presenting a better understanding of those from state institutions.

The exciting fact that sets Psychology of Orphans apart from other books is that the research obtained is for the first time based from within Russia.

LanguageEnglish
PublisheriUniverse
Release dateOct 22, 2008
ISBN9780595873593
Psychology of Orphans
Author

Dr. Ludmila M. Shipitsyna

Dr. Lyudmila M. Shipitsyna is a Rector of the Institute of Special Education and Psychology in Saint-Petersburg, Russia. An author of more than 400 publications, Dr. Shipitsyna was inducted into Cambridge University?s Order of Friendship, receiving recognition as one of the 2,000 greatest people of the 20th century, for leadership and research in special education.

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    Psychology of Orphans - Dr. Ludmila M. Shipitsyna

    Contents

    Special Acknowledgment

    INTRODUCTION

    1

    2

    3

    4

    5

    6

    7

    8

    PRACTICAL THOUGHTS ON ADOPTION RESEARCH AND ITS USE

    INTRODUCTION

    CANADIAN EXAMPLE

    INTERNATIONAL INFLUENCE

    ADOPTION HISTORY AND RESEARCH

    REFERENCE

    This current book represents an analysis of various forms of family upbringing of orphan children and children left without parental care. It makes a special accent on a description of principles, types and contents of an innovative model of patronate upbringing, as well as experience of its implementation in the City of Moscow and the Province of Vladimir, in Russia. The annexes describe various samples of legal documents, questionnaires and diagnostic resumes used in selecting of patron parents.

    This book may be used for training of patron parents, undergraduate and graduate students majoring in education and psychology, as well as for professionals of specialized boarding-type educational institutions and social centers for families and children.

    © Lyudmila M. Shipitsyna, 2005

    © The Institute of Special Education and Special Psychology (Russia), 2005

    Special Acknowledgment

    Acknowledgment is given to Gordon D. Lewis for his work in bring this book to print in North America. His own addition in the knowledge and practical application of international adoptions makes a sound conclusion to the Psychology of Orphans

    INTRODUCTION

    The increase in the number of socially endangered children, deterioration of their physical and psychological health, increase in criminal behavior and drug addiction cases among children and adolescents are a great concern to the government and society in Russia.

    The total number of children in Russia decreased by 4,289 000 over the last 10 years and this process continues. The number of children who have not yet reached the age of 18 totaled 30.5 million, by the beginning of 2003. The birth rate in Russia is less than the rate of the population’s simple natural reproduction. The number of orphans, however, is increasing annually and amounted to 699,200 in 2004.

    Ninety-five per cent of present-day orphans have parents, however, they have either been deprived of their parental rights, or they gave up those rights themselves.

    According to statistics, in 60 per cent of all cases, parents undertake this voluntary step due to their child’s serious illness. About 20 per cent of all cases are motivated by financial hardship. There is a serious contradiction in the ability of many families between the need to provide normal living conditions allowing for the proper developmental environment for their children and inadequate economic conditions of the majority of families.

    The number of orphans is on the increase, due to forced population migration and economic crisis. Various data on the total number of orphans in Russia exists as shown from the low number of 2004 (699,200) to the present day official police files that state 2.5 million while it is 4 million, according to various independent sources. The criminal offense rate among adolescents is also on the increase. There were 208,000 registered criminal offenses that were committed by youngsters in the year 2000, including murders, robberies and drug-related crimes. More than 50 per cent of the young delinquents grew up in incomplete families, with over 30 per cent of psychologically unstable children who grew up without a father (18, 238).

    According to statistics, Russia occupies First place in the world, by the number of orphans per each 10,000 children. Nearly 50 per cent of this country’s children, (about 18 million), belong to the social risk zone. There are 422 baby foster homes for 35,000 children, 745 foster homes for 84,000 children and 237 boarding schools for 71,000 children in Russia. More than 100,000 children who need guardianship are discovered in Russia annually.

    Currently children do not have solid legal protection against cruelty and domestic violence. Domestic violence is the reason that approximately 2,000 children and adolescents commit suicide annually, 50,000 leave their homes and 6,000 run away from foster homes and boarding schools. Twenty-five to twenty-six thousand minors become victims of a crime annually. Over 2,500 sexual offenses are registered in Russia each year, including sexual offenses against minors. Cases of rape of minors are on the increase.

    We are used to explaining an increase in the number of social orphans through various social problems, i.e. poverty, unemployment, parental alcoholism, etc. However, many nations while undergoing similar economic crisis, do not have such numbers of children abandoned by their parents.

    Many socio-economic measures have been taken in Russia over the recent years to prevent child abandonment. The Russian government regularly passes decrees which adopt various measures to combat abandonment and crime among minors. New types of assistance to children and families are being developed, with new regional centers for family support now opening to advance this assistance.

    However positive these actions are, they have not led to a decrease in social abandonment. This lack of positive results reveals that the new measures taken do not take into account some of the more important aspects of the problem of abandoned children. As long as the government looks only to the socio-economic conditions of the family as the major cause of abandonment, any measures taken will prove to be ineffective. At the same time, a lot of families have managed to keep their children, despite having undergone serious economic and psychological crisis.

    There are four major factors that influence the solution of the abandonment problem: socio-economic, psychological, educational and health-related. Currently, main government efforts are concentrated in the socio-economic area. They provide wide assistance to various population strati instead of assistance aimed precisely at those families at risk of abandonment. There are almost no efforts aimed at resolving psychological and health-related causes. The Ministry of Education has had the responsibility of orphan issues including education for some time in Russia. The activities of various social and psychological services are aimed, not at prevention of abandonment, but at assisting those who have already become orphans.

    It is a historical fact traced back even to ancient times that active discussions were held regarding the specifics of child development in orphanages and the goals of their upbringing. Up until the 20th century these discussions were primarily held by therapists, teachers and philosophers. Psychologists entered the scene much later. The first psychological researches of children in orphanages were performed in the 1920’s. Under the influence of the theory of psychoanalysis, there was an opinion of psychology at the time (that is shared by many even up to the present) being that the first years in the life of a child are critical in affecting the development of his or her personality. Consequently, researchers paid major attention to babies and little children.

    It has been convincingly demonstrated that the loss of the parental family and primarily the loss of communication with a mother, influences a child’s development quite negatively. This influence becomes even more acute the earlier the loss of maternal communication occurs. The first detailed data had been obtained by the group of researchers from the Vienna School of Child Psychology, led by Sh. Buler.

    The later famous research by R. Spitz, J. Bowlby and K. Goldfarb that determined the direction for research of the problem of psychological deprivation in childhood clearly relied heavily on the Vienna School data.

    It is the research of orphanages and the specific impairments in personality development of children within orphanages that led J. Bowlby to propose the attachment theory. It is shown in psychological research of attachment that only intimate, emotional and stable relationships with an ‘object of attachment’ resulted in normal psychological development and the development of a healthy, active and socially adaptable personality.

    The ability to love and to attach is the fundamental characteristic of a normal development, which is called a criterion of psychological health by all major psychologists and psychotherapists, beginning with Sigmund Freud. The inevitable instability and multi-polarity of a social environment that surrounds a child in an orphanage is clear. The absence of a key caregiver (person who takes care of a child) and mentor (one who guides him or her throughout their life) and lack of adult supervision in providing feelings of stability, reliability and protection, creates extremely unfavorable conditions for the formation of attachment and emotional development for a child. Moreover, it contributes to the destruction of the natural instinct of a child for intimacy and love. These children do not form the most important foundation for their further psychological development and for feelings of trust to the world.

    A series of Russian psychological research had been undertaken in the 1980s and 1990s that have convincingly shown negative consequences of an institutionalized upbringing.

    The major theme of this research is the idea that children’s upbringing in the conditions of an orphanage does not take into account adequate psychological conditions of providing for full personality development and inevitably includes factors slowing down psychological development.

    This present book, Psychology of Orphans is devoted, not only to psychological aspects of the development of social orphans, but also to multidisciplinary issues associated with the development, education and upbringing of children in their natural families, as well as in the alternative families and boarding institutions.

    In this book we have tried to analyze the results obtained from the Russian and foreign researchers, as well as the results from our own research in issues of psychological and educational causes of the existence of problem families and children, possibilities for psychological rehabilitation and correction of the orphans’ upbringing within foster or patron families, as well as within centers for family upbringing and various other types of family placement.

    One of the new types of family placement of orphans is a patron family. Patronate upbringing is the type of placement of a child who requires government assistance, into the families of ‘patron parents’, under the mandatory condition of separation of the rights and responsibilities and the protection of the legal interests of a child, between the child’s parents, the institution and the patron parents.

    The Patronate upbringing was known since ancient times, though it only started to spread in Europe and the USA since the middle of the 19th century.

    The development of patronate upbringing started in various countries of the world in the 20th century, especially after the end of World War II. Throughout the first post-war decades, the development of this form of upbringing allowed closure of large children’s homes almost everywhere. Family upbringing appeared to be much cheaper for the states’ budgets and more suitable to the needs of children. As a result 75% of children in the USA were returned to their biological parents, while the other 25% were placed into advantageous family environments.

    The Buckner Foundation has the most significant experience in organization of patron families and training patrons for children in the USA. The Buckner Foundation has over 100 years of experience in executing social programs aimed at reduction of the number of institutionalized children and finding a family for a child where he or she would be getting an individualized approach and attention.

    In 1995, The Buckner Foundation organized the Department of International Assistance to Orphans in the USA. It also began organizing assistance programs in Russia as well. According to an agreement with the Russian Federation’s Department of Education, the Buckner Foundation and the governments of several Russian provinces, including the Province of Vladimir and the City of St.Petersburg, are working on establishing models of patron families using foreign experiences and adjusting those to Russian reality. The analysis of the results of implementation of this new form of family placement for orphans has shown efficiency and opportunities for development of patronate system in conditions of modern Russia in both large urban centers and small towns. There are, however, a lot of difficulties in implementation of system of patronate families in Russia. They are associated in the first place with the lack of

    * Proper legislation;

    * Psychological and educational criteria for selection of patron parents;

    * Complex system of guidance for patron families;

    * Preparation, training and consulting of patron parents etc.

    The present textbook is the fruit of common efforts of the professionals from the Buckner Foundation and the Institute of Special Education and Special Psychology of the Raoul Wallenberg International University for Family and Child. Its main goal is assistance in preparation and training of patron parents and children’s home professionals in selecting orphans for the system of patronate care and subsequent guidance.

    The textbook touches upon main problems and causes of disadvantaged childhood in Russia, features of psychological development of institutionalized orphans with emphasis on causes of their socialization, emotional development and communication area. Various types of family upbringing of orphans and children left without parental care in historical and modern aspects are considered. The book pays its main attention to the development of a system of patronate care, its principles, methods and models.

    Separate chapters are devoted to the description of current legislation providing for the rights and guarantees given to children left without parental care, as well as providing for the rights, duties and responsibilities of parents with respect to education and upbringing of their children.

    This book may be useful to undergraduate and graduate students majoring in education and psychology, as well as to professionals of specialized institutions, teachers, psychologists, speech therapists and social workers. It may also be used for the education process of parents wishing to adopt a child or to become a foster parent or a patron.

    1

    THE MAIN

    CHARACTERISTICS OF PROBLEM CHILDHOOD IN RUSSIA

    1.1. The Reasons for Children becoming «Social» Orphans

    Some of the main categories of problem children in Russia is comprised of children without parents, children with parents whose parental rights have been taken away, children of incarcerated parents, as well as children of those parents who are incapable of performing their parental duties due to the social and moral specifics of their lifestyles.

    The major increase in the numbers of «social» orphans and development of some new features of this phenomenon has become a serious challenge for Russia over the recent years. The so-called «hidden social orphans» can be found due to deterioration in living conditions of a lot of families. The number of children belonging to the above-mentioned category is constantly increasing due to instability of socio-political situation, inflation, unemployment, forced population migration, decrease in the level of families’ living conditions and weakening of their infrastructure.

    The known numbers of children without parental care is on a constant increase.

    This number was 59,000 in 1991; 102,000 in 1994, 113,000 in 1998 and 123, 600 in 2000 (an 8% increase).

    The number of institutionalized children amounted to 272,700 as of January 1, 2000. That means an increase of almost 120,000 over the three years. The number of institutions for children is also on the increase. The increase amounted to 182 institutions for normally developing children and 18 institutions for children with various developmental disabilities over a three-year period. Around 30% of known «social» orphans are institutionalized. Around 50% of «social» orphans are transferred to their relatives’ care, while about 0.9% to the guardian families. Various families foster around 7% of all children here and abroad.

    The number of orphans and children without parental care is constantly growing in spite of the sharp decline in birth rates. This number was 572,000 in 1996; 597,000 in 1997; 620,000 in 1998; 662,000 in 2000 and 700,000 in 2001.

    The number of full orphans is increasing because of the early parental deaths mostly due to unnatural causes. The full orphans’ share among the total number of orphans amounted to only 5% of the total number of orphans only 5-7 years ago. Nowadays this indicator reaches 25 to 30% in some of the provinces.

    The phenomenon of «social» orphans has gained recently an acute socio-economic and moral importance. There is a need for deep analysis of social, psychological and educational aspects of this problem. What are the causes for the children to be left alone while their parents are still alive?

    This is not just a Russian problem. Intensive urbanization of modern society, enormous social changes and intensive population migration in many countries is accompanied by the increase in the numbers of children abandon parentally. However, the nature of such an abnormal form of mothers’ behavior still remains unknown and incompletely researched. Some practical research involving these women, as well as the analysis of existing sources of scientific information regarding this problem is found in the following. These mothers have extreme difficulty of counteraction between various social, psychological and pathological factors that negatively influence the feelings of motherhood, which represents the most important form of women’s social behavior.

    The Belgian committee on women’s social issues has described three main categories of women leaving their children upon extensive study of all reasons for leaving children by their mothers. The first and the most frequent is when a child’s father leaves a future mother while pregnant. The second is when a child is born out of wedlock. The third category consists of women with low levels of social and moral adaptability and responsibility.

    Russia is experiencing the third wave of increase in the number of orphans over the last 100 years. The first wave occurred after the communist takeover and World War I, the second wave happened after World War II. There had been 678,000 orphans in Russia in 1945 and about 700,000 at the end of 2001. Nowadays the increase amounts to 100,000 children per year. The reasons for existence of orphans in 1945 are understandable. At the same time it is difficult to recognize and accept as natural the following causes of orphans’ existence at the present time:

    - The leading cause in the recent years is alcoholism and drug addiction that lead to cruelty towards children in the family, neglect of their needs and interests. Over 100,000 children annually are taken away from such families, partially through taking away parental rights (43,000 in the year 2000).

    - The number of full orphans increases due to early deaths among the population due mostly to unnatural causes.

    - There is an increase in parental incompetence due mostly to psychological illnesses.

    - The number of incarcerated parents does not decrease.

    - The number of children born out of wedlock is on the increase

    - The social disorganization of families, financial difficulties and difficulties in living conditions are increasing, as well as unhealthy relations between parents and degradation in family morals.

    The reasons for children becoming social orphans mentioned above are only describing the consequences, the final point in a complex way of degradation of a human. The consequence of this degradation is incapability to bring up one’s own children, decrease in parental responsibility and even premeditated refusal to perform parental duties.

    1.2. Implications of Social Orphan hood for the Children

    The implications of becoming «social» orphans early in their lives are very negative for the children. They include: heavy and often irreversible consequences for their physical and psychological well-being, which started showing up even prior to the official loss of their families such as;

    * abnormal fetus development during an unwanted pregnancy;

    * negative social experiences during early and pre-school childhood.

    Being an orphan has a destructive effect upon the emotional connection of a child with his or her social environment, with the world of adults and peers, who are developing in more advantageous conditions and causes serious secondary disturbances of his or her physical, psychological and social development.

    The most dramatic implication of «social» orphanhood is the direct threat to the physical health, as well as psychological and social development of a child who is left without parental care. Up to 60% of all children’s homes patients are children with various chronic diseases, primarily those of their central nervous system and those belonging to the 3rd through 5th health groups (the lowest health groups). Over 55% of patients lack in their physical development. Only 4.7% of all patients may be characterized as completely healthy.

    The reasons of physical and psychological disorders of orphan-children vary. First of all, most institutionalized children have hereditary disorders caused by alcoholism, as well as by drug addiction over the recent years. The number of orphans suffering from hereditary psychological and neurological disorders is constantly increasing. It is the abandoned children who most often have inherent physical and psychological abnormalities as a result of their parents being intoxicated during the ovulation process or due to the use by the future mother of various chemicals that are allegedly supposed to stop pregnancy. Moreover, the institutionalized children are genetically presupposed to various psychological disorders, including mental disabilities and schizophrenia.

    Second, the unwanted pregnancies are dangerous by it self when a future mother is predisposed to abandon a newborn right in the maternity ward. The effects of stress during such a pregnancy represent the causes of deviations of vital interactions between a mother and a fetus and disruptions of various sensor, exchange and gummoral connections between them. The majority of future mothers who are inclined to abandon their newborns experience various psychological disorders during their pregnancies, such as hysterical reactions, depression, psychic disorders etc. Psychological disorders lead to abnormal behaviors of these women during pregnancy, such as hyperactivity, unsuccessful attempts to abort, use of tobacco, alcohol, narcotic drugs etc. The majority of them are unprepared to give birth, which is evidenced by extremely high rates of premature births (37.5% as compared to 4.7% in the general population), as well as high rates of various disorders during the birth process it self (59.2%). Two-thirds of all newborns have weights of less than 3 kg. Almost half of those born upon maturity have signs of morphological functional immaturity. 43.7% of newborns showed clear signs of brain damage. 46.9% of all newborns are in need of intensive care as compared to 14.8% of the general population newborns.

    Premature births, small weight of newborns and cerebral disorders that accompany them often lead to various neural and psychological disorders in approximately 47 to 60% of all cases. If we combine all of the above with the negative influence of the early break up with the mother upon the newborn’s psychological development inevitably accompanied by the newborn’s psychological deprivation, as well as hereditary influence of parental psychological disorders, it becomes evident that children born out of unwanted pregnancies comprise a special psychological risk group and require extreme attention and extensive medical, social, educational and psychological prevention measures right from the time of their birth.

    The majority of child abandonment cases are associated mostly with temporary personality, social, psychological and financial crises rather than with specific social needs or serious moral degradation of a particular woman. In many countries of the world that do not have «social» orphanhood there exist various social, medical and psychological support services that actively cater for women and families in crisis situations. Unfortunately, it must be noted that in this country similar services are only beginning to emerge over the recent years.

    The third factor that leads to various disorders in elder orphans is the variety of social, educational and psychological bad habits in the former parental families. The forms of improper upbringing characteristic of «social» orphanhood are complete absence of care and the so-called hyper-care. The majority of families where children are lacking any kind of care may be characterized as socially disadvantaged families with low standard of living, unacceptable nutrition levels, parents’ alcohol addiction, immoral ways of life, assaults and abuses within the families, as well as common habitation with relatives having serious psychological disorders.

    Various forms of physical, sexual and emotional abuse of children are typical for those families. The absence of parental love, lack of proper nutrition, lack of schooling, various forms of abuse lead the children to leave such families. All of these become the reason for sensor and social deprivation and lack in psychological development in 2/3 of all cases, as well as the reason for brain malfunctions associated with neural disorders, enuresis, learning disabilities, slow reaction times, emotional instability, habitual lying, pathological fantasies and expression of neurotic reactions.

    The fourth and definitely one of the most important factors for children’s disabilities and lack of their proper social adjustment is his or her forced taking out of a native family and institutionalization. The parental family with its natural form of life organization and its communication level with relatives and especially with a child’s mother represents the main condition of full-valued psychological and emotional development of a child. Taking a child from his or her parents facilitates the development of so-called deprivational psychological disabilities, which become more serious the longer the period of a child losing contact with his or her mother and the longer the influence of this break up upon a child. In early childhood such deprivation causes such disabilities characteristic of early development stage as lack of general and speech development, lack in development of fine movement and mimics. Later various emotional disabilities may be observed, such as lack of expression of emotions, inclinations to fear and worries, behavior deviations like frequent reactions of active and passive protest and refusals, lack of distancing feeling in communications or vice versa difficulties in communication.

    Isolation of a child from his or her mother usually causes serious consequences in his or her intellectual development and formation of personality that are not subject to correction. Starting from the second year of life isolation from a mother also leads to negative results for a child’s personality that are not subject to correction, though his or her intellectual development may become completely normal.

    Orphanages usually get those children who already suffer from psychological deprivation and lack of parental care. Stopping lengthy deprivation in the early childhood obviously leads to normalization in development. It concerns, however, only visible behavior and general functions of intellect. As for the speech development it may be delayed even if deprivation ended prior to a child achieving the age of 12 months. In general, the earlier the deprivation of a baby that is less than

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