Roland Spickermann is Associate Professor of History at the University of Texas - Permian Basin.
In Child, Family, State, Roland Spickermann traces the evolution and politicization of adoption in Germany over the 19th and 20th centuries. From adult adoption intended to preserve a family’s lineage, through the use of adoption to preserve the purity of the race, to adoption as the means of best ensuring proper care for a parentless child, that evolution was complex and convoluted .Through five different regimes, Spickermann masterfully explores how the state became increasingly involved in the process of adoption, and how the notions of adoption, family, and an adopted child’s place in a family changed over time – with important implications for both the adopted child and the adoptive family. * Lynne Taylor, Associate Professor, University of Waterloo, Canada *