Can First Parents Speak? A Spivakean Reading of First Parents’ Agency and Resistance in Transnational Adoption

dc.contributor.authorAtamhi Cawayu
dc.contributor.authorHari Prasad Sacré
dc.coverage.spatialBolivia
dc.date.accessioned2026-03-22T14:42:03Z
dc.date.available2026-03-22T14:42:03Z
dc.date.issued2024
dc.descriptionCitaciones: 5
dc.description.abstractThis article analyses the search strategies of first families in Bolivia contesting the separation of their children through transnational adoption. These first parents’ claims to visibility and acknowledgement have remained largely ignored by adoption policy and scholarship, historically privileging the perspectives of actors in adoptive countries, such as adoptive parents and adoption professionals. Filling in this gap, we discuss the search strategies employed by first families in Bolivia who desire a reunion with their child. Drawing on Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak’s feminist postcolonial theory, we analyse ethnographic fieldwork with fourteen first families in Bolivia. We read how the agency of first parents, severely limited by the loss of legal rights through the adoption system, is caught in a double bind of dependency and possibility. While hegemonic adoption discourse portrays first parents as passive and consenting to the adoption system, the results of our study complicate this picture. Moreover, we argue that the search activity of the first parents can be read as a claim and request to revise and negotiate their consent to transnational adoption. Ultimately, we read first parents’ search efforts as resistance to the closed nature of the adoption system, which restricts them in their search for their children.
dc.identifier.doi10.3390/genealogy8010008
dc.identifier.urihttps://doi.org/10.3390/genealogy8010008
dc.identifier.urihttps://andeanlibrary.org/handle/123456789/48039
dc.language.isoen
dc.publisherMultidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
dc.relation.ispartofGenealogy
dc.sourceUniversidad Católica Bolivia San Pablo
dc.subjectAgency (philosophy)
dc.subjectAcknowledgement
dc.subjectNegotiation
dc.subjectResistance (ecology)
dc.subjectScholarship
dc.subjectHegemony
dc.subjectReading (process)
dc.subjectEthnography
dc.subjectSociology
dc.subjectGender studies
dc.titleCan First Parents Speak? A Spivakean Reading of First Parents’ Agency and Resistance in Transnational Adoption
dc.typearticle

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