Whether you are looking for an agency to help you to adopt a baby, or you are someone who needs help in placing their own child for adoption, we can help! BabyAdoptionAgency.com is a directory of Adoption Agencies in the United States. You can search by city and state to find the listings for each city.
Generally, an adoption agency is an organization licensed by the state to prepare homestudies, complete relinquishment of birthparents' parental rights, conduct post-placement supervision and finalize adoptions. Services may also include outreach and counseling support to adopting parents and birthparents.
To find an adoption agency in any city and state, just use the link on the left or click here.
Types of Domestic Adoption
With Hollywood adoptions being all the rage, exemplified by mega-couple Brad
Pitt and Angelina Jolie, adoption has been pushed to the forefront of the
collective American consciousness. People generally understand what adoption is,
but there remain some obscure details about adoption that go unknown. For
instance, are there different kinds of adoption? What is the adoption process
like? What's the difference between adoptive children and foster children?
These are all important questions, each of which this article will touch on
briefly. First of all, there are two major types of adoption: domestic and
international. This article will focus on the various kinds of domestic adoption
in the United States. The most important thing to keep in mind is that once an
adoption has been finalized, adoptive children and biological children are no
different under the eyes of the law. Whether adopted or born into the family,
all children are equal members of the family system.
Open Adoption:
There are actually two definitions for this term. When used in the United
States, open adoption most commonly means an adoption in which the birth parents
is involved in the process and remain so even after finalization. Typically,
birth parents will choose to meet prospective adoptive parents before choosing
to place their child in their care. This is usually done before the baby is
born. The two sets of parents can agree that the birth parents will be allowed
to remain involved in the child's life, albeit in a non-parental role. Phone
calls, letters, and regular visits are not uncommon in this sort of arrangement.
This term can also be used to indicate a type of adoption in which the adopted
person has access to their own files and records. In the United Kingdom, for
example, adopted children are granted this right upon turning 18.
Semi-Open Adoption:
A modification of the above arrangement, semi-open adoption involves
significantly less involvement in the child's life on the part of the birth
parents. Adoptive parents and birth parents may still meet face to face prior to
undertaking the adoption process, but typically there is no physical contact
beyond that. The birth parents and the child may occasionally exchange photos or
letters.
Closed Adoption:
In this type of adoption, minimal information is shared between birth and
adoptive parents prior to placement. After the finalization of the adoption,
adoptive and birth parents share no information. This type of adoption can take
place in cases of child abuse or neglect, or when the birth parents have
specified that they want no contact.
Foster Care Adoption:
This occurs when a foster child is adopted by their foster parents. Children may
be placed in foster care for one of a number of reasons, one being abuse or
neglect. They may remain foster children-- meaning that the foster parents are
guardians, but the children are not legally their own-- or the foster parents
sometimes choose to adopt them. Upon finalization of the adoption, the foster
child officially becomes the child of their former foster parents.
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