Adoption and Immigration—How d
(2006-09-01 16:28:37)
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Adoption and Immigration—How does the process work?
By: Nicole C. Dillard, Esq.
Many families abroad and here in the United States, face major decisions regarding adopting a child. Over 20,000 inter-country adoptions are taking place per year in addition to the more than 200,000 foreign adopted children already living in the U.S. The Department of Homeland Security and the USCIS play a key role in facilitating the immigration process of many foreign born children who are adopted by U.S. Citizens or Lawful Permanent Residents.
There are two ways to bring an adopted child into the United States:
1. Adopt a child who is already an orphan and who automatically becomes eligible to enter the United States as an immediate relative. (An orphan, for immigration purposes, is one who is an orphan because of the death or disappearance of, abandonment or desertion by, or separation or loss from, both parents, or for whom the sole or surviving parent is incapable of providing the proper case and has, in writing, irrevocably released the child for emigration and adoption…) Only U.S. citizens are eligible to immigrate a child as an orphan.
2. Adopt a child and reside with that child for two years prior to petitioning for the child. U.S. Citizens and lawful permanent residents may immigrate a child with whom they have lived for two years.
The adoption of a foreign-born orphan does not automatically guarantee the child’s eligibility to immigrate to the United States. The adoptive parent needs to be aware of U.S. immigration law and legal regulatory procedures. An important point to note is that if you are considering adopting an older child, you should be aware of the age limits on eligibility for adoption and immigration, regardless of whether your local state rules allow for the adoption. Generally, in order to adopt a child and immigrate that child to the United States, the child must be under the age of 16. However, there are two exceptions:
n Siblings of a child adopted by the same parents may be adopted if under 18; and
n Orphans over the age of 16 may be adopted as long as the I-600 (Petition to classify an orphan as an immediate relative, which demonstrates the parent’s intent to adopt the child) was filed on their behalf BEFORE their 16th birthday (or in the case of an orphan who is the sibling of a child adopted by the same parents, BEFORE their 18th birthday).
If you adopt a child within the allowable age provisions, and you live with the child for two years as the child’s primary caregiver, then you may filing the necessary petition on behalf of that child. Even if you adopt or intend to adopt a child who meets the legal definition of an orphan, you may petition for that child at any time prior to the child’s 16th or 18th birthday (as described above), even if the adoption takes place subsequently (in some states, the adoption may not be final until the child comes to the U.S. and the adoption is registered with the courts).
If you are considering adopting a child and wish to have that child to legally immigrate to the United States, please confer with an immigration attorney to discuss your child’s eligibility to immigrate to the United States.
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