Narrating Displacement Adoptees' Challenges Due to Minority Stress

J Child Adolesc Trauma. 2021 Sep 16;15(3):811-820. doi: 10.1007/s40653-021-00403-8. eCollection 2022 Sep.

Abstract

The experiences and the stories of adopted individuals cannot be understood apart from the social context that shapes them. Interpretative phenomenological analysis was used as the aim of this study was to assess the impact of the adoption of dominant social discourse on adoptees. Four themes relating to the aims of the current research emerged from the data: (1) adoptees' deviant construction of themselves, (2) experiences of invalidation and marginalization, (3) rationalization of adoption, and (4) adoption-related un-acknowledged losses. This study's results show that participants' individualized and/or societal distressing experiences can be considered within the context of minority stress. For clinical and counseling purposes it is important to understand whether these minority identities result in extra social stresses as a result of their social stigma.

Keywords: Adoption; Minority stress; Social stigma; Social stresses; Societal beliefs.