"Fluid adoption" is common in
Pacific culture, and rarely are ties to the biological family severed, as traditionally has occurred in Western
adoptions. Many Europeans and Americans associate adoption as a solution to something gone wrong, e.g. unwanted pregnancy (by genetic parent) or infertility (by adoptive parent). By contrast, most of the Pacific cultures, for example in
Sikaiana in the
Solomon Islands, prefer that children move between different households. Fosterage is viewed as a way to create and maintain close personal relations, and parents traditionally do not refuse to let others take their children. These transfers of children between different caretakers and households are not exclusive, and they do not permanently separate the children from their biological parents. New Zealand
Māori have a form of traditional adoption practised within extended family called
whāngai (
Māori, "to feed"). Ties to the biological family are not normally severed.
Kiribati culture also practice this fluid adoption, called "tibu".
Tahitians practice '''' (literally "giving to eat") adoption. Its basic functions are comparable to the ones of other traditional adoption practices, notably in Africa; a child can be "given" with the agreement or on the initiative of the family council for a variety of reasons, and they can even be asked for and given before birth.
Tikopia Traditional
Tikopia (
Solomon Islands) society did not practice adoption as it is traditionally understood in Western societies. It was not uncommon for families to rear children left parentless, and childless adults would sometimes take the child of another family and bring it up. The children, however, retained the tribal affiliation of their biological fathers, and inherited land only from the property of the paternal lineage, not from the property of the lineage of the guardian. ==References==