None.
You have the same parental rights as an adult when the baby is born. During the pregnancy and after you are the one deciding over your health.
You would have to file a Petition to Terminate Parental Rights and get a judgment.
I am presuming that you're asking if one parent can relinquish her parental rights and basically give the child to another adult who is unrelated and not the child's other parent. The basic rule is that if one parent terminates her rights then the other parent has those rights unless the rights of that adult were previously terminated. I am sure that in any case the adult to whom the child was given must officially adopt the child by going through certain judicial proceedings.
Parental rights can only be taken away in Kentucky if it is proven that the parent is unfit. Child support will still need to be supplied until the kid reaches an age where he could be declared an adult.
You need to consult with an attorney or legal advocate in your jurisdiction. Note that you cannot simply give up parental rights in order to avoid child support. Generally there must be another adult who is willing to take over your legal responsibilities and financial obligations as the child's parent. In general, parental rights are terminated either preparatory to an adoption, or after a trial in which it is determined that the parent is unfit. In any case, termination of parental rights does not, in itself, terminate child support.
It is typically not common to terminate parental rights with an adult child. Once a child has reached the age of majority, the legal relationship between a parent and child is different. If there are exceptional circumstances where termination of parental rights is necessary, legal counsel should be sought to determine the best course of action.
A 16 year old is not an adult, regardless of how many children she has. Guardians have been appointed? Sounds like the court has taken away parental rights.
As for a child born outside wedlock, the same as any adult, along with no rights. see link below
In general, parental rights are terminated either preparatory to an adoption, or after a trial in which it is determined that the parent is unfit. In any case, termination of parental rights does not, in itself, terminate child support.
No. The child is an adult now so it's too late.
Yes, that should not be a problem with parental consent. However you will not be legally emancipated with full rights as an adult -- your parents will still have legal custody -- unless you go through that process with the courts.
You cannot voluntarily relinquish parental rights under Pennsylvania law unless the child is being adopted. The courts may involuntarily terminate parental rights under specific (and dire) circumstances. Many people are operating under the false assumption that signing over their rights absolves them of child support responsibilities when often, it does not....not unless the child is legally adopted by another adult willing and able to assume financial responsibility for the child.