There is no evidence that Shakespeare was an adoptive parent.
The issues a single adoptive parent may run into is financial and child care problems. There is also the issue of not being available all the time. These issues apply to biological and adoptive parents.
The difference between a biological parent and an adoptive parent is that the biological parent is the one who is related to the child by blood and the adoptive parent is the one that raised the child.
It could be if they didn't have permission from the adoptive parent.
Adoptive or adopted. A child is adopted, a parent is adoptive.
If you're even thinking of that you should of never became an adoptive parent in the first place. Because you can't do that. If the child is acting up then maybe they're not happy. You might want to change that.
An adult can't disown another adult. Divorce is about the only way or to just not have anything to do with another adult anymore. Your question needs a lot more clarifying as it isn't really clear in meaning.Since the person is an adult they can simply refuse to see their adoptive parents or let their children see their adoptive grandparent. If the adoptive parents continue to harass or interfere in any way with the safety of the adult's children then a restraining order can be placed upon the adoptive parent.Also, the issue isn't adoptive or natural in regards to the parent. The bottom line is that if you have someone in your life you don't want your kids to be around that is your choice as a parent. Them being adoptive parents is irrelevant.
No. Miss America contestants have to swear that they're unmarried, not pregnant, and not the adoptive or biological parent of a child.
Adoptive parent. Once a child has been adopted, his adoptive parents are his parents, period. It is as though he had been born to them. He no longer has ANY legal relationship to his birth parents; he has no claim on them nor they on him.
No. Miss America contestants have to swear that they're unmarried, not pregnant, and not the adoptive or biological parent of a child.
No they do not. In a case like this I would contact the adoptive parents and ask if it was OK.
A pregnant minor or one who is already a parent is not emancipated apart from regarding their health or the child. And adopted children are legally like the biological ones to the adoptive parent. This means you are not emancipated until you are 18 and can only then decide where to go or move.