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Adoption - San Antonio Adoption Attorney
The following is some basic information on adoption to
help our clients better understand all that is involved
with the adoption process.
The decision to adopt a child can be one of the most
rewarding that an individual or couple can make. As with
any rewarding decision, it can be extraordinarily complex.
Those who wish to adopt a child must be willing not merely
to welcome a new life into their hearts; they must also
be willing to deal with legal and bureaucratic issues that
can easily take as long as a typical pregnancy. The key
to adopting successfully is to do one's homework: finding
reputable attorneys and agencies, knowing the pros and cons
of different types of adoptions, and understanding the need
to be actively involved at every step without allowing impatience
or frustration to take control.
People adopt for a variety of reasons. Many adoptive
parents cannot have children. Others want to provide a loving
environment for children in need of a home; many parents
who adopt have already given birth to children. Some people
choose to adopt "special needs" children (children with
disabilities, for example). The reasons for adoption notwithstanding,
the most important requirement for adoptive parents is that
they accept adoption as being as irreversible as the birth
process.
Beginning in the last 20 years or so, overseas adoptions
became increasingly common. More prospective parents turned
to Russia, China, and South and Central America for adoption.
This trend was spurred on by several factors, the two most
important being easier availability and less fear of legal
challenges. Domestic adoptions are not subject to widespread
legal challenges, but it is not impossible for birth parents
or birth relatives to initiate proceedings to revoke an
adoption. For these reasons, it is critically important
to work with people who are experienced in the adoption
process and who understand what makes for a successful adoption.

Learn about the different ways you can
adopt a child.
There are quite a few different ways to bring a child
into your life, or confirm your legal relationship with
one, through adoption. Here's the lowdown on the different
ways that adoption can work.
Agency Adoptions
Agency adoptions involve the placement of a child
with adoptive parents by a public agency, or by a private
agency licensed or regulated by the state.
Public agencies generally place children who have become
wards of the state for reasons such as orphanage, abandonment,
or abuse. Private agencies are sometimes run by charities
or social service organizations. Children placed through
private agencies are usually brought to the agency by a
parent or parents who have or are expecting a child they
want to give up for adoption.
Independent Adoptions
In a private, or independent, adoption, no agency
is involved in the adoption. Some independent adoptions
involve a direct arrangement between the birth parents and
the adoptive parents, while others use an intermediary such
as an attorney, doctor, or clergyperson. For most independent
adoptions, whether or not an intermediary is involved, the
adopting parents will usually hire an attorney to take care
of the court paperwork.
Most states allow independent adoptions, though many
regulate them quite carefully. Independent adoptions are
not allowed in Connecticut, Delaware, or Massachusetts.
An "open adoption" is an independent adoption in which
the adoptive parents and birth parents have contact during
the gestation period and the new parents agree to maintain
some contact with the birth parents after the adoption,
through letters, photos, or in-person visits.
Identified Adoptions
An identified, or designated, adoption is one in
which the adopting parents and the birth mother find each
other and then ask an adoption agency to take over the rest
of the adoption process. The process is a hybrid of an independent
and an agency adoption.
Prospective adoptive parents are spared the waiting lists
of agencies by finding the birth parent themselves, but
they reap the benefits of the agency's counseling services
and experience with adoption legalities. Everyone may simply
feel more comfortable if an agency is involved. Identified
adoptions are available to parents in the states (Connecticut,
Delaware, and Massachusetts) that ban independent adoptions.
Stepparent Adoptions
In a stepparent adoption, a parent's new spouse
adopts a child the parent had with a previous partner. Stepparent
adoption procedures are less cumbersome than agency or independent
adoption procedures. The process is simpler, especially
if the child's other birth parent consents to the
adoption.
To learn more about adoption, visit our
adoption information center.
Contact us for
more information
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