“…Although questions about the competency of White parents to successfully raise well-adjusted racial minority children have been raised for decades (Barn, 2013;Evan B. Donaldson Adoption Institute, 2008), recent research offers some insight into factors that facilitate positive outcomes for transracially adopted youth. Like their counterparts raised in same-race families, minority youth raised by White parents seem to be better adjusted when their parents engage in racial socialization (Johnston, Swim, Saltsman, Deater-Deckard, & Petrill, 2007). Broadly defined, racial socialization is the transmission of information about race and ethnicity from parents to children, and these parental practices foster children's racial-ethnic identity development, enhance their self-esteem, and promote their ability to cope with discrimination (Hughes et al, 2006;Leslie, Smith, Hrapczynski, & Riley, 2012;Miller, 1999).…”