Adoption Terms
Adoptee. A person who was adopted. Some people prefer the terms adopted child or adopted person.
Adoption. The complete transfer of parental rights and obliga- tions from one parent or set of parents to another. A legal Adoption requires a court action.
Adoption agency. An organization, usually licensed by the state, that provides services to birth parents, adoptive parents and children who need families. Agencies may be public or pri- vate, secular or religious, for profit or nonprofit.
Adoption assistance. Monthly federal or state subsidy payments to help adoptive parents raise children with special needs.
Adoption attorney. A lawyer who files, processes and finalizes adoptions in court. In some states attorneys may also arrange adoption placements.
Adoption consultant or adoption facilitator. Individual whose business involves connecting birth parents and prospective adoptive parents for a fee (only in a few states). In in- ternational adoption, a facilitator may help adoptive parents complete the adoption in the child’s country of origin.
Adoption plan. Birth parents’ decisions to allow their child to be placed for adoption.
Adoption tax credits. Nonrefundable credit that reduces taxes owed by adoptive parents who claim adoption expense reim- bursement on federal taxes (and in some states with similar legislation, on state taxes). Through the IRS program, adop- tive parents whose annual adjusted gross income is $115,000 or less can take advantage of up to $5,000 ($6,000 for special- needs adoption) in tax credits to offset qualifying adoption expenses. After 2001, the adoption credit may apply only to an adoption of a child with special needs and does not apply to an adoption of a foreign child. The credit calculation can include adoption fees, court fees, attorney fees and travel ex- penses incurred during or after 1997.
Adoption triad. The three major parties in an adoption: birth parents, adoptive parents and adopted child. Also called adop- tion triangle or adoption circle.
Agency adoption. Adoptive placements made by licensed or- ganizations that screen prospective adoptive parents and su- pervise the placement of children in adoptive homes until the adoption is finalized.
Birth parent. A child’s biological parent.
Closed adoption. An adoption that involves total confidential- ity and sealed records.
Confidentiality. The legally required process of keeping iden- tifying or other significant information secret. Also, the prin- ciple of ethical practice that requires social workers and other professionals not to disclose information about a client with- out the client’s consent.
Consent to adopt or consent to adoption. Legal permission for the adoption to proceed.
Decree of adoption. A legal order that finalizes an adoption.
Dossier. A set of legal documents used in international adop- tion to process a child’s adoption or assignment of guardian- ship in the foreign court.
Employer benefit. Compensation to workers through em- ployer-sponsored programs, e.g., financial assistance, reim- bursement of adoption expenses and/or provision of parental or family leave. For a list of employers who provide benefits, call the National Adoption Center at 800-TO-ADOPT.
Finalization. The final legal step in the adoption process; in- volves a court hearing during which the judge orders that the adoptive parents become the child’s legal parents.
Foster parents. State- or county-licensed adults who provide a temporary home for children whose birth parents are unable to care for them.
Home study. A process through which prospective adoptive par- ents are educated about adoption and evaluated to determine their suitability to adopt.
Identifying information. Information on birth parents or adop- tive parents that discloses their identities.
Independent adoption. An adoption facilitated by other than an adoption agency.
INS. U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service, a federal agency under the Justice Department that oversees all visas issued to allow entry into the U.S.
Interstate Compact on the Placement of Children (ICPC). An agreement regulating the placement of children across state lines.
Legal guardian. A person who has legal responsibility for the care and management of a person (such as a minor child) who is incapable of administering his or her own affairs.
Legal risk placement. Placement of a child in a prospective adoptive family when the child is not yet legally free for adoption.
Open adoption. An adoption that involves some amount of ini- tial and/or ongoing contact between birth and adoptive fam- ilies, ranging from sending letters through the agency to ex- changing names and/or scheduling visits.
Photo listings. Photos and descriptions of children who are available for adoption.
Placement. The point at which a child begins to live with prospec- tive adoptive parents; the period before the adoption is finalized.
Postplacement supervision. The range of counseling and agency services provided to the adoptive family after the child’s place- ment and before the adoption is finalized in court.
Private adoption. See Independent adoption.
Private agencies. Nongovernmental adoption agencies licensed by the state.
Public agencies. Social service agencies run by state or county governments that deal mainly with children in foster care.
Readoption. For a child adopted in another country, a second adoption in a U.S. court.
Relative adoption. Adoption by a biological relative of the child.
Relinquishment. Voluntary termination of parental rights. Some prefer the phrase making an adoption plan.
Reunion. A meeting between an adopted person and birth par- ents or other birth relatives.
Search. An attempt to locate and/or make a connection with a birth parent or a biological child.
Semi-open adoption. An adoption in which a child’s birth par- ents and adoptive parents may meet once or twice but ex- change primarily nonidentifying information.
Special-needs children. Children whom agencies consider dif- ficult to place because of emotional or physical disorders, age, race, membership in a sibling group, history of abuse or other factors.
Transracial adoption. An adoption in which the child and par- ent (s) are not of the same race.
Waiting children. Children in the public child welfare system who cannot return to their birth homes and need permanent, loving families to help them grow up safe and secure.