It really depends on the parent giving up the child but most likely not.
An adoption is where a child is "adopted" by another couple who is not their birth parents. This gives a child a nice home and a good future...
In an open adoption the birth parent(s) are allowed to visit and contact the child. The child may not know them as mom or dad but rather as aunt uncle or cousin. In a closed adoption the birth parents have no contact with the child what so ever. Also, in a closed adoption, the adoptive parents have the right not to tell the child they are adopted if that makes life easier. I was adopted in a closed adoption.
On adoption, the Torah says that the child's status is determined by his birth parents and not adoptive parents.
There are many types of adoption including international and local. There is also Open and private adoptions. An Open adoption is when the biological parent(s) are allowed visitation with the child. A private adoption is like when a child is turned over into the chosen adopted family right after birth and the biological parent(s) have no contact with the child.
Some people think there is too much red-tape involved in adoption. Others are afraid of the birth parents coming back later wanting the child back and others are just afraid of the health factors associated with an adoptive child.
In the United States the rights of a birth mother to contact an adopted child are determined by state law. If an adoption agency handled the adoption, then the birth mother has no rights until the child is of legal age. After that, the adoption agency will usually help the birth mother find the adopted child.
If the adoption was finalized, then it will be an uphill battle for the birth mother. The more time which goes by after an adoption, the more trying it is for a child to just switch homes. Time and a finalized adoption must be on your side to win.
Yes
to my experience my father was married, had a child she was adopted by another man but still lived with her mother , My father past away and she is intitled to an inheritance because she remained with one of her birth parents and was not adopted out to other people . This is how she was abel to an inheriance.
No. Adoption papers cannot be sign until there is a child and legally they do not exist until after birth. Promising something before birth will have no legal stand. A mother will have the option to change her mind when she sees her child. That is only fair.
In Kansas, if the father did not begin paying child six month prior to the birth of the child, he cannot challenge an adoption. Guess how many know this?
No. The adoption order serves to show the relationship.