Based on ethnographic fieldwork at a small Chicago adoption agency specializing in transracial adoption, <I>Contingent Kinship</I> charts the entanglement of institutional structures and ideologies of family, race, and class to argue that adoption is powerfully implicated in the question of who can have a future in the twenty-first-century United States. With a unique focus on the role that social workers and other professionals play in mediating relationships between expectant...