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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).
No.No.No.No.
well depends on the situation
ring your adoption agency and go from there good luck
Yes, and she should find a good lawyer too.
I contacted the adoption agency in the town where I was adopted from. You could be assigned a case manager who will work with you.
If she was adopted, there is a record of her biological parent, call the adoption agency she came from. if she wasnt adopted it almost impossible to find the biological mother.
you cant reverse an adoption, whens the babys been handed away, its most likely you wont see them again, the adoption agency isn't allowed to give you the babys new address or new name, its all legal, even if your the birth mother:(x
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.
It depends on the type of adoption. For overseas adoption, some might go to the child's birth country's government to cover various fees, some might go to the agency who provides care for the child and other children as they wait for families, some goes to the home study agency, some goes to government fees in our own country. For an adoption in the US, lots of the cost goes to the agency to pay the folks who work with you doing the home study, who work with the birth mother, etc. If you have ANY concerns about costs, a reputable agency will be able to give you a precise cost breakdown. If they cannot, they are NOT the agency to trust.
no, she cannot
This varies from state to state. You should call an adoption agency or adoption attorney in the state where the child resides.