References
- Anderson, Robert (1989). The nature of adoptee search: Adventure, cure or growth? Child Welfare, 68 (6), 623–632.
- Avery, R. & Ashton, J. (1994). Adoptive parent's attitudes toward openness in adoption records: A study of New York adoptive parents 1994–1995. New York State citizen's coalition for children, Inc.
- Belbas, Nancy, F. (1986). Staying in touch: Empathy in open adoptions. Smith College Studies in Social Work, 57, 184–198.
- Berman, L. & Bufferd, R. (1986). Family treatment to address loss in adoptive families. Social Casework, 67(1), 2–11.
- Brinish, Pr. (1995). Psychoanalytic perspectives on adoption and ambivalence. Psychoanalytic Psychology, 12(2), 181–199.
- Brodzinsky, D. & Schecter, M. (Eds.). (1990). The psychology of adoption, New York: Oxford University Press.
- Brodzinsky, D. Schechter, D. & Brodzinsky, A. (1986). Children's knowledge of adoption: Developmental changes and implications for adjustment. pp. 205–232. In Ashmore & Brodzinsky, Thinking about the family. Hillsdale, New Jersey: Lawrence Erlbaum Assoc.
- Brodzinsky, D., Schechter, M., & Henig, R. (1992). Being adopted: The lifelong search for self. New York: Doubleday.
- Greenson, R. (1967). The technique and practice of psychoanalysis, (1) 155. New York: International Universities Press, Inc.
- Hartman, A. (1991). Every clinical social worker is in post-adoption practice. J. of Independent Social Work, 5 (3–4), 149–163.
- Hartman, A. (1993). Secrecy in adoption. In E. Imber-Black (Ed.), Secrets in families & family therapy (pp. 86–106). New York: Norton.
- Johnson, D. & Fein, E. (1991). The concept of attachment: Applications to adoption. Children and Youth Services Review, 13 (5–6), 397–12.
- Kirk, H.D. (1964). Shared fate. New York: Free Press.
- Kohut, H. (1971). The analysis of the self. International University Press.
- Kowal, K. & Schilling, K. (1985). Adoption through the eyes of adult adoptees. Amer. J. Orthopsych, 55 (31. July.
- Lachman, F. & Beebe, B. (1992), Representational and Selfobject Transference: A Developmental Perspective. In A. Goldberg (Ed.), Progress in Self Psychology Vol. 8 (pp. 3–15). New Jersey: Analytic Press.
- Lee, R. (1963). North Carolina Family Law, Vol. 3 p. 223. Charlottesville. Virginia.
- Partridge, P. (1991). The particular challenges of being adopted. Smith College Studies in Social Work, 61(2), 197–208.
- Quinodoz, D. (1996). An adopted analysand's transference of a ‘hole-object.’ Internal. J. Psycho-Anal., April: 334.
- Rosenberg, E. (1992). The adoption life cycle. New York: Macmillan.
- Silverman D. & Gruentha. R. (1993), Fantasy: A Consolidation. Psychoanalytic Psychology, 10(1), 39–60.
- Sorosky, A., Baran, A. & Pannor, R. (1975). Identity conflicts in adoptees. Amer. J. Orthopsych., 45 (1).
- Sorosky, A., Baran, A., & Panor, R. (1978). The adoption triangle. New York: Doubleday.
- Stolorow, R. & Atwood, G. (1972). Contexts of being. Hillsdale, New Jersey: Analytic Press.
- Wieder, H. (1977–1). On being told of adoption. Psychoanalytic O., 46: 1–22.
- Wieder, H. (1977–2). The family romance fantasies of adopted children. Psychoanalytic Q., 46: 185–200.
- Wieder, H. (1978). Special problems in the psychoanalysis of adopted children. In Glenn, J. (Ed.), Child analysis as therapy. New York: Jason Aronson, pp. 557–577.