Source · Select Committees · Education Committee
8th Report - Historical Forced Adoption
Education Committee
HC 1713
Published 27 March 2026
Recommendations
3
Survivors of forced adoption must not have to repeat, in public, their harrowing stories anymore.
Recommendation
Survivors of forced adoption must not have to repeat, in public, their harrowing stories anymore. It is clear that decisive Government action, beginning with a co-authored apology, and continuing with a programme of fully funded support for survivors, must now …
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Department for Education
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6
The meaningful involvement of survivors in the design and implementation of an apology is essential...
Recommendation
The meaningful involvement of survivors in the design and implementation of an apology is essential to ensure that the apology validates their experiences and that the mitigations put in place thereafter support them directly. The Government must embed mothers and …
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Department for Education
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7
The Government must provide an unqualified, formal apology to all those affected by historical forced...
Recommendation
The Government must provide an unqualified, formal apology to all those affected by historical forced adoption practices, including unmarried mothers who were forced to give up their children for adoption, adult adoptees who were forcibly taken from their birth families, …
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Department for Education
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8
The Government must give an initial commitment to an apology, and must undertake the preliminary...
Recommendation
The Government must give an initial commitment to an apology, and must undertake the preliminary work for an apology - including working with survivor groups - as quickly as possible and commit publicly to a clear timetable for developing and …
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Department for Education
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9
The Government must work directly with mothers, adult adoptees and lived-experience organisations to co-author both...
Recommendation
The Government must work directly with mothers, adult adoptees and lived-experience organisations to co-author both the apology and the measures that follow it. Co-production should run through all subsequent commitments on accessing records, trauma-informed health support, intermediary services, research and …
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Department for Education
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11
We are encouraged by the Minister’s acceptance that the state had a role in historical...
Recommendation
We are encouraged by the Minister’s acceptance that the state had a role in historical forced adoptions. However, the Government must go further by acknowledging the central role that the state had during this time. (Conclusion, Paragraph 39)
Department for Education
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12
The Government should formally and publicly recognise that the state played a central role in...
Recommendation
The Government should formally and publicly recognise that the state played a central role in enabling and sustaining historical forced adoption practices. Acknowledging this responsibility is essential in order to correct the public record, address previous misrepresentations, reduce the burden …
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Department for Education
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14
The Government must listen to and engage with survivors of forced adoption practices.
Recommendation
The Government must listen to and engage with survivors of forced adoption practices. The Government should commit to a survivor engagement strategy that guarantees regular consultation and clear lines of accountability, both in the short term as the Government works …
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Department for Education
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15
The Government must undertake a rigorous assessment of international responses to historical forced adoptions, with...
Recommendation
The Government must undertake a rigorous assessment of international responses to historical forced adoptions, with special attention to the redress mechanisms introduced in Australia, Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland. This learning should inform a UK approach that avoids …
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Department for Education
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16
The Government must take urgent action to ensure that all existing adoption records are preserved...
Recommendation
The Government must take urgent action to ensure that all existing adoption records are preserved and protected from deterioration, destruction or loss. It should legislate to introduce a clear statutory duty on every record-holding institution to maintain and securely store …
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Department for Education
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17
The Government must take steps to ensure that all affected individuals receive timely, consistent and...
Recommendation
The Government must take steps to ensure that all affected individuals receive timely, consistent and transparent access to adoption records. This obligation should be underpinned by clear statutory duties requiring every record-holding body to maintain accurate records and meet nationally …
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Department for Education
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18
The Government should issue new guidance to local authorities to improve the experience of birth...
Recommendation
The Government should issue new guidance to local authorities to improve the experience of birth mothers and adult adoptees seeking information about their records, with additional resources provided to local authorities so that requests for access to records do not …
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Department for Education
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20
The Government must introduce a nationally funded and regulated intermediary service to ensure that all...
Recommendation
The Government must introduce a nationally funded and regulated intermediary service to ensure that all adoptees and birth relatives have access to skilled, trauma-informed professionals who can support them in navigating contact, reunion, or information-sharing processes safely and sensitively. As …
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Department for Education
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21
The Government must introduce a dedicated, trauma-informed health pathway for all those affected by historical...
Recommendation
The Government must introduce a dedicated, trauma-informed health pathway for all those affected by historical forced adoption. This should include improved access to specialist psychological support for birth mothers and adult adoptees, national clinical guidance recognising the heightened prevalence of …
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Department for Education
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22
Adult adoptees told us that one of the harms they experienced was the loss of...
Recommendation
Adult adoptees told us that one of the harms they experienced was the loss of their health records. The Government should introduce an adoption marker on health records so that requests for medical history can be sensitively handled and additional …
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Department for Education
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23
The Government should commission and fund independent research into historical forced adoption, including quantitative and...
Recommendation
The Government should commission and fund independent research into historical forced adoption, including quantitative and qualitative studies on outcomes and on best practice for support interventions, to build a comprehensive evidence base that informs future policy decisions and improves support …
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Department for Education
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Conclusions (7)
1
Conclusion
We are in agreement as a Committee that the survivors’ testimony, which was a formal Parliamentary proceeding and live broadcast, was some of the most powerful, moving and compelling evidence we have heard. We would like to place on the record our heartfelt thanks for their bravery, honesty and eloquence. …
2
Conclusion
To give an idea of the scale of this issue, it is estimated that around 185,000 children were adopted between 1949 and 1976. Not all adoptions happened in the appalling circumstances described by our lived experience witnesses - for example, sometimes children were orphaned. People with lived experience may have …
4
Conclusion
Historical forced adoption practices involved systemic coercion, the removal of parental choice and often resulted in deep trauma and lifelong consequences for mental and physical health. A formal apology is necessary to acknowledge these harms and to recognise the state’s role in 28 permitting them. We should be clear that …
5
Conclusion
Furthermore, many of those affected - both mothers and adult adoptees - are now elderly, and any further delay risks denying them the recognition they have waited decades to receive. Given the advancing age of those affected, time is now a critical factor. (Conclusion, Paragraph 29)
10
Conclusion
Evidence shows that government policy decisions, funding arrangements and legislative frameworks shaped the environment in which unmarried mothers were routinely denied any meaningful choice in whether or not they could keep their children and were often shamed and coerced into submitting to have their children put up for adoption. (Conclusion, …
13
Conclusion
Survivors of historical forced adoption practices have stressed the profound emotional burden of continually recounting their experiences and the many years they have spent campaigning without feeling heard by Government. It is clear to us that ongoing, structured dialogue with survivors is not an optional extra but a foundation for …
19
Conclusion
Beyond this, it was clear from our evidence that as well as safeguarding and maintaining records, organisations holding records must ensure they take steps to respond to and help survivors in a way that is sensitive to the challenges for survivors in approaching an organisation that may have been complicit …