|
2-2-2
available
by the Ohio State Bar Foundation and critical support provided by the Dave
Thomas Foundation for Adoption helped make the site possible.
“We’re very proud of our partnership with the National Center for
Adoption Law & Policy on this project” said U.S. Secretary of Health and
Human Services Tommy G. Thompson. “The
Center’s dedicated work – and the commitment of more than 8000 student
research hours by Capital University Law students – has made the law of adoption more
accessible and less intimidating. This
new resource will ultimately lead to more children having safe, permanent homes
more quickly.”
The National Center’s
director, Professor Kent Markus, emphasized one of the site’s features
designed particularly with lay users in mind.
“We’ve provided plain English summaries of the laws and key cases in
each state with links from the summaries to those laws and cases. Now, anybody can find out about who must
consent to an adoption, when
parental rights can be involuntarily terminated by a court, or what the rules
are for step-parent adoptions.”
One
unusual technical feature of the Adoption LawSite is that full electronic
copies of all statutes, regulations and cases available on the site reside on
server space controlled by the National Center for
Adoption Law & Policy. The
Center’s staff will regularly update those materials to reflect changes in
the law thereby avoiding the need to rely on links that may go dead or Web
pages managed by others that may be out of date or expired.
-
30 –
To the
reporter:
A demonstration of the
Adoption LawSite will take place at a press briefing in the Holeman Lounge at the National Press Club, 529 14th
Street, NW, Washington, DC at 10:00
a.m.
on Tuesday, July 15. The briefing will
include succinct remarks by Markus; Pryce; Janice Goldwater, Executive
Director of Adoptions Together, Inc.; Sue Badeau, mother of 22 children (20
of them special-needs adopted children), national adoption advocate and trainer,
and Deputy Director of the Pew Commission on Children in Foster Care; Judge
Paul P. Panepinto, who serves on the
National Council of Juvenile and Family Court Judges Board of
Trustees; and Commissioner Joan Ohl, Administration on Children, Youth and
Families, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
For in-depth information
about the National Center for Adoption Law &
Policy at Capital University Law School, including its mission,
current projects and upcoming national symposium, contact its Director,
Professor Kent Markus, at 614.236.6545 or visit the Center’s Website at www.ncalp.org. Professor Markus offers the only course in
Adoption Law regularly available at an American law school and he is
currently writing the first-ever Adoption Law casebook for law school faculty
and students.
|
|