The answer depends on the details. It depends on the reason for the guardianship. If the child was removed from the parent's custody and placed with a guardian the parent may or may not be able to regain custody. If the parent's parental rights were terminated they cannot get legal custody of the child back. If the parent consented to a temporary guardianship and the parent is now better able to care for the child the guardianship can be terminated and custody restored to the parent. It would not be necessary for the parent to adopt the child.
If you have given birth to a child, you are by default their legal guardian. If you have given them up for adoption, you have given up your legal rights to that child. In that case it is difficult to regain those rights without talking to the foster parents and negotiating some kind of deal. You cannot, however "adopt" your child in this case because it will be referred to as "restitution of legal rights" or something like that.
I dont think so. i mean lets pretend you gave birth. the hospital mostly is accurate on which baby is which. i read a book about that once and all the mother did was take her to her home.
can an adoptive parent give up custody of their child back to the biological parent
You can only be adopted if you are under 16
Yes. An adopted child can inherit from his biological parents if said biological parents so choose.
yes.
Whether you have custody of your own or someone elses child it's the biological parents that pay child support for their child. If they can not pay there is welfare.
That would be your own if you adopt a foster child.
The only way you can adopt a child is that you have no child of your own at all. I have 2 girls of my own and live in america. my husband wanted to adopt a child in Iran. You also need to have a house or a land under the child's name in order to adopt a child.
You need to see a lawyer. Look for "Legal Aid" in your state as they offer free or low-cost legal advice. If someone is the "biological" father, he doesn't adopt the child, it is his child. He is legally obligated (in the USA) to provide support (money) for the child's needs. The only exception is if the mother was married to another man at the time of the birth, then legally the husband is considered the baby's father (even if everyone knows and admits that the other man is the baby's biological father). If you're asking whether the biological father can be forced to take care of the child in his own house, the answer is "no" he can give up his parental rights to the child. If you're asking whether the biological father can take the child away from the mother and her boyfriend/husband, the answer is "maybe" if he can PROVE to a court that the baby's mother is unfit and he (the biological father) is a better parent. If the father WANTS to be involved in the baby's life even though the mother has a new boyfriend/husband, the father MUST be allowed to have visitation with his child. Not allowing him to see the child may cause the courts to consider the mother not fit to raise the child. Again, GET LEGAL ADVICE from a lawyer.
Some parents who have their own children simply love children and may take in foster children (give them a place to live, but your parents do not adopt them as their own) or adopting a child and they will be raised fairly with the other children in the family.
No, a minor can not sue their own parent in the state of Iowa. A child can file for emancipation from a parent in the state.
It can be very complicated depending upon the laws of the state in which the couple reside and whether or not the biological father disagrees with the adoption. If the child is a result of an affair during the marriage, the court rarely intervenes if the husband accepts the child as his own, even if the biological father files for parental rights. If the child was conceived out of a relationship before the woman married, then no action can be taken until the child is born, parentage is established and the biological father voluntarily relinquishes his parental rights. If the biological father forfeits his rights to the child, the couple can petition the court for the husband to legally adopt said child. A biological parent CANNOT be forced to give up his parental rights to a child except by a court when it pertains to matters of abuse, neglect, etc. Please be advised, this is the basic legal procedure, exact information pertaining to the issue should be obtained from an attorney licensed to practice family law in the state where the couple reside.
it depends on which state because different states have different laws on that. they differ on the age of the child.
This can mean two things, the first is the discussion a parent has with their child, perhaps to do with what the child can do or cannot do. The other is about biology which I do not think applies here. The first may be that the child has reached the age where they a capable of making up their own mind, where as the parent may have other ideas best suited to the child's welfare.
The biological father would not need to adopt his own child. He would petition the court for full custody of the minor child and assuming the court deemed him fit for parenting he would become the sole custodian.
That's not true at all whoever answered this!!! its different in every state.............some states have laws where the biological parent has a period to take their child back like 1 yr or 2 after adoption then its confirmed ( like Massu adopt a child thru the court the biological can take their child anytime up to 1 after the court date....some states (like u said) say once the baby is adopted thru the court its over and their child.......and some states leave it completley open....3 states hold that law but each state has its own law..........AnswerThat's not possible. Once the biological parent has relinquished their rights to a child or the court has terminated those rights and the child has been adopted it is permanent.The only option would be if the adoptive parents voluntarily relinquished their parental rights and the court allowed the child to be placed in the biological mother's custody an action which is highly unlikely.Other than that the child would have to wait until he or she reached the age of majority and could then make their own decision.Emancipation of the minor would not be an option as the court would not grant an emancipation decree based on such circumstances.
Once a person adopts a child, they are now the 'parent' or owner of the child. The biological parents would no longer be financially responsible. though both of the biological parents would have to sign the proper adoption documents for this to happen.