For­eign Pol­icy looks at the inter­na­tional adop­tion trade and the cor­rup­tion that has made it a lucra­tive indus­try.

West­ern­ers have been sold the myth of a world orphan cri­sis. We are told that mil­lions of chil­dren are wait­ing for their “for­ever fam­i­lies” to res­cue them from lives of aban­don­ment and abuse. But many of the infants and tod­dlers being adopted by West­ern par­ents today are not orphans at all. Yes, hun­dreds of thou­sands of chil­dren around the world do need lov­ing homes. But more often than not, the need­i­est chil­dren are sick, dis­abled, trau­ma­tized, or older than 5. They are not the healthy babies that, quite under­stand­ably, most West­ern­ers hope to adopt. There are sim­ply not enough healthy, adopt­able infants to meet West­ern demand—and there’s too much West­ern money in search of chil­dren. As a result, many inter­na­tional adop­tion agen­cies work not to find homes for needy chil­dren but to find chil­dren for West­ern homes.