
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


The Chinese Communist Party made a seemingly sudden decision to end its international adoption program in late August. Then, in September, the State Department told American families who were matched with children in China that they would likely never be united with the children they were pursuing for adoption. The news was a devastating blow to the hopes and dreams of hundreds of Chinese children and their prospective families, many of whom had been waiting for their adoptions to be finalized since before the start of the pandemic. This decision also leaves hundreds of thousands of children, most of whom have special needs, languishing in Chinese orphanages.
Join Hudson for a conversation on what the US government and the international community can do to help these children and their families.
By Hudson Institute4.8
4141 ratings
The Chinese Communist Party made a seemingly sudden decision to end its international adoption program in late August. Then, in September, the State Department told American families who were matched with children in China that they would likely never be united with the children they were pursuing for adoption. The news was a devastating blow to the hopes and dreams of hundreds of Chinese children and their prospective families, many of whom had been waiting for their adoptions to be finalized since before the start of the pandemic. This decision also leaves hundreds of thousands of children, most of whom have special needs, languishing in Chinese orphanages.
Join Hudson for a conversation on what the US government and the international community can do to help these children and their families.

19 Listeners

602 Listeners

1,069 Listeners

213 Listeners

716 Listeners

287 Listeners

2,005 Listeners

691 Listeners

21 Listeners

470 Listeners

147 Listeners

450 Listeners

432 Listeners

114 Listeners

269 Listeners