The only way birthparents could adopt their child back is if the adoptive parents put the child up for adoption and agreed to give the child back to the birthparents. Once the child is adopted, the birthparents cannot force the parents to give the child back.
A Love Beyond Borders is a good international adoption agency that allows single parents to adopt.
Any parent looking to adopt should check with their city/state about kids up for adoption. Contact a local adoption agency to find out who is up for adoption. Make sure you know if you want to have an open or closed adoption (open is the birth parents can contact the child closed is they can not) and be prepared for adoption to be set up and then fall though (the birth mother/father stop the adoption process).
If the child's parents are no longer in the legal picture, then there are steps to follow in order to adopt the child. Many foster children are in foster care while their parents get education, jobs and/or get off of drugs, so the child or children are not available for adoption.
No. When you leave a child for adoption the papers you sign mean that you are legally prevented from being that child's parent again. The final decision on who will adopt a child is the courts even if the adoptive parents say yes in this case. The adoption can be reverted so the child is up for adoption again if they feel they are not his parents but the biological parents can not adopt him.
If your parents are not your biological parents and have adopted you and made themselves your legal guardians then they would have to have adoption papers or it wouldn't be legal.
I'm not sure what their historical views on adoption are, but in the two Amish communities we have lived in Adoption was becomming increasingly accepted. Many couples who could not have children naturally were becoming foster parents with the hope of being able to adopt children. I beleive historically, they have been hesitant to become foster parents due to requirements such as the requirement to obtain a photo ID. At least that had been an issue in one Amish community in Illinois where we resided.
The demand for adopting infants in some regions often exceeds the number of available infants for adoption, leading to waiting lists. However, older children and those with special needs may have a harder time finding adoptive families, resulting in a need for more potential parents. Overall, the number of people looking to adopt varies depending on factors such as the age and health of the child.
No, unless they adopt.
You can't adopt an older sibling. You could sponsor them. Adoption is for minor children to be cared for by an adult.
Yes, gay men can adopt children in the UK. Full Joint adoption is also available for gay couples.
When you adopt without an adoption agency it is called a private adoption.
If her legal guardian (probably her parents) consent, an adoption could be simple. If the present parents will not consent, you would need to litigate the issue. You should speak with an attorney that practices adoption law in your state for more information. Perhaps you could be awarded a guardianship rather than having to adopt her.