Adoptions DSS 2011-13
Data Set Specification Attributes
Identifying and definitional attributes | |
Metadata item type:![]() | Data Set Specification |
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METEOR identifier:![]() | 467027 |
Registration status:![]() | Community Services (retired), Standard 20/05/2013 |
DSS type:![]() | Data Set Specification (DSS) |
Scope:![]() | The Adoptions Australia collection contains data relating to two populations of children, those subject to:
Adoption is the legal process by which a person legally becomes a child of the adoptive parent(s) and legally ceases to be a child of his/her existing parent(s). Adopted children include people aged 18+ years. The Adoptions data set specification (DDS) describes data collected from state/territory departments responsible of adoptions within the specified reporting period. The DSS excludes adoptions by Australian citizens or permanent residents who have lived overseas for 12 months or more and have adopted a child through an overseas agency or government authority. This type of intercountry adoption falls outside the jurisdiction of the Australian state and territory departments responsible for adoption. |
Collection and usage attributes | |
Guide for use:![]() | Adoption categories Intercountry adoptions—adoptions of children from countries other than Australia who are legally able to be placed for adoption, but who generally have had no previous contact or relationship with the adoptive parents. Expatriate adoptions are not included in this category of adoption. Hague/non-Hague countries An adopted child's country of origin is categorised as either a 'Hague' or a 'non-Hague' country. A Hague intercountry adoption is where the adoptive child's country of origin has ratified or acceded to the Hague Convention on Protection of Children and Co-operation in Respect of Intercountry Adoption, and the applicant(s) file was sent after the Convention entered into force in that country. By ratifying or acceding to the Hague Convention a country is legally bound to apply the Convention. In some cases, the categorisation of a country as either 'Hague' or 'non-Hague' may vary at different stages of the overseas adoption process (for example, a country may have signed but not yet ratified or acceded to the Hague Convention when an applicant's file is sent to that country, but by the time the adopted child enters Australia and is placed with their adoptive parent(s), the country may have ratified or acceded to the Convention and the Convention has come into force). By signing the Hague Convention a country expresses, in principle, its intention to become a party to the Convention. However, signature does not, in any way, oblige a country to take further action (towards ratification or not). A country is party to the Hague Convention if it has ratified or acceded to the Convention - this involves the legal obligation for the country to apply the Convention. The lists of 'Hague' countries, (ie. countries that ratified or acceded to the Hague Convention) can be found here. The listed date the Convention came into effect can be used to determine which countries had ratified the Convention before the end of the reporting period for the Adoptions DSS 2011-13 (i.e. 30 June 2013). |
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Implementation start date:![]() | 01/07/2011 |
Implementation end date:![]() | 30/06/2013 |
Comments:![]() | For local and intercountry adoptions, children are placed with their adoptive families before their adoption order is finalised. Some children placed for adoption during the reporting period may not have their adoption finalised until a following year. In addition, some adoption orders finalised in the reporting period may relate to children who were placed in previous years. |
Relational attributes | |
Related metadata references:![]() | Has been superseded by Adoptions DSS 2013-14 Community Services (retired), Recorded 20/03/2014 Has been superseded by Adoptions DSS 2013-16 Children and Families, Superseded 20/03/2018 |