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Same-sex adoption in the United States

Until 2017, laws related to LGBTQ+ couples adopting children varied by state. Some states granted full adoption rights to same-sex couples, while others banned same-sex adoption or only allowed one partner in a same-sex relationship to adopt the biological child of the other. Despite these rulings, same-sex couples and members of the LGBTQ+ community still face discrimination when attempting to foster children.[1]

On 31 March 2016, Federal District Court struck down Mississippi's ban on same-sex couple adoptions.[2] On June 26, 2017, the United States Supreme Court reversed an Arkansas Supreme Court ruling that allowed a law listing parents by gender on birth certificates to stand. The new SCOTUS ruling allowed both same-sex spouses to be listed on birth certificates.[3] These court rulings made adoption by same-sex couples legal in all 50 states.

In 2022, Congress passed the Respect for Marriage Act which requires that states respect marriage licenses of same-sex couples as long as the marriage was valid in the state in which it was performed. This act repeals the 1996 Defense of Marriage Act which defined marriage as the union of one man and one woman and allowed states to decline to recognize same-sex marriages that were performed in other states. The Respect for Marriage Act will legally defend the rights and protections which LGBTQ+ and interracial couples and their children are entitled.[4]

Attitudes toward same-sex parenting have improved as the number of same-sex couples and same-sex parenting overall has increased in the United States. From 2007 to 2011, public condemnation of same-sex parenting in the U.S. dropped from 50% to 35%, while acceptance has remained relatively stable.[5]

In 2023, same-sex couples were more likely to raise an adopted child. 4% of adopted children and 3% of foster children were being raised by LGBTQ+ couples. After Mississippi was the last state to overturn laws banning LGBTQ+ adoption and the federal marriage equality ruling in 2015, there are now protection rights for same-sex couples to adopt throughout the United States which has brought more acceptance and support for same-sex couples when adopting children.[6]

Studies have found that same-sex couples often favor adoption as the method for starting a family. They tend to place significantly less emphasis on the biological methods of conceiving a child than heterosexual families do. LGBTQ families are up to 10 times more likely to adopt than heterosexual couples. Additionally, an organization called Creating A Family reported that 60% of adoptions by LGBTQ families are transracial. One study even found that "gay and lesbian parents were more likely than heterosexual parents to be matched with hard-to-place children, partially because they were more open to being matched with children with hard-to-place profiles."[7] Some argue that these statistics are due, in some part, to discriminatory practices that make it more difficult to adopt for LGBTQ families and deem minority children less “ideal” adoptees.

Background Edit

On April 6, 1999, the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) published Overview of Lesbian and Gay Parenting, Adoption, and Foster Care. Key findings included:[8]

  • There is no evidence to suggest that lesbians and gay men are less fit to be parents than heterosexual couples.
  • Home environments with lesbian and gay parents are just as likely to successfully support a child's development as those with heterosexual parents.
  • Good parenting is not influenced by sexual orientation. Rather, it is influenced most profoundly by a parent's ability to create a loving and nurturing home, an ability that does not depend on whether the parent is gay or straight.
  • There is no evidence to suggest that the children of lesbian and gay parents are less intelligent, suffer from more problems, are less popular, or have lower self-esteem than children of heterosexual parents.
  • Children of lesbian and gay parents grow up as happy, healthy, and well-adjusted as the children of heterosexual parents.[9]

Some researchers have written that children of gay and lesbian families are often subjected to teasing and harassment in their peer groups.[10][11] They also tend to be singled out and questioned about their family life more than children in heteronormative homes.[12]

Formerly, many children raised by same-sex parents had been born into one of their parents' previous heterosexual relationships.[13] As such, many prior legal disputes were over child custody in cases of divorce. There were biases against the parent who was in a now same-sex relationship; these biases caused courts to disfavor them in awarding custody and visitation rights. The sexual orientation of the LGBTQ+ parent, and not their ability to provide for the child's needs, was viewed as having a negative impact on the child's upbringing.[13] Similar to intrauterine insemination using a sperm donor, the introduction of in vitro fertilization enabled lesbian couples to raise children of their own who had not been born from heterosexual relationships.[13] The development of in vitro fertilization created controversy about co-parent adoption and, in cases where lesbian couples separated, child custody. The practice also generated controversy about the presumption of parenthood: when a woman in a heterosexual marriage gives birth, her husband is legally presumed to be the child's father, but courts have only recently extended this privilege to lesbian couples.[14]

For male same-sex couples, becoming a parent can be more costly because surrogacy is the only way for them to have a biological child.[15] As such, adoption is generally the more cost-effective alternative for same-sex couples. The average cost of adoption is around $30,000, while surrogacy starts around $100,000 and can be upwards of $150,000, making adoption the more affordable option.[16]

Statistics Edit

In 2020, the United States Census Bureau determined that same-sex couples (3.1%) are three times more likely to have adopted children than opposite-sex couples (1.1%). Data from 2019 revealed that 43.3% of same-sex couples’ children were adopted and/or stepchildren. Approximately 20.9% of same-sex couples had adoptive children compared to the 2.9% of opposite-sex couples that also had adoptive children. [17]

According to the Williams Institute, as of 2009, "an estimated 20,000 same-sex couples are raising nearly 30,000 adopted children."[18] As of 2011, about two million children in the U.S. were being raised by LGBT parents but could not establish a legal relationship with both parents.[19] In 2019 the American Community Survey revealed that female same-sex households were more likely to have children under 18 in their care (22.5%) than male same-sex households (6.6%). [20]

Professional assessment Edit

There is consensus among the medical, psychological, and social welfare communities that children raised by gay and lesbian parents are just as likely to be well-adjusted as those raised by heterosexual parents[21] and research to support this conclusion is accepted beyond debate in the field of developmental psychology.[22] In 2010, the Third District Court of Appeals of the State of Florida concluded that "based on the robust nature of the evidence available in the field [...] the issue is so far beyond dispute that it would be irrational to hold otherwise; the best interests of children are not preserved by prohibiting homosexual adoption".[23] The most important factors in maintaining a child's welfare depend more on socioeconomic status and less on the gender and sexuality of the parents. Issues arise from uncontrolled factors such as discrimination or the inability of parents to get married.[24] Some individuals who oppose child-rearing by gay and lesbian couples fear that it will result in the child becoming gay or lesbian themselves. Established data, however, does not support this claim.[25]

A qualitative study by Goldberg, Kinkler, Richardson, and Downing surveyed couples in same-sex and heterosexual relationships who had adopted children through open adoption. This was notable as little prior research had focused on gender and sexual orientation in open adoption relationships. Data from 90 individuals, including 30 women in 15 lesbian relationships, 30 men in 15 gay relationships, as well as 15 women and 15 men in heterosexual relationships were analyzed. All couples were adopting their first child and they were all first-time parents. The study was conducted within the borders of the United States. Participants filled out a questionnaire and were interviewed by telephone three to four months after adopting their child. All participants were between the ages of 27 and 52 (average 37.7 years), and 90% were Caucasian. Results indicated that gay and lesbian couples tended to emphasize openness and a desire to pursue adoption without hiding their sexual orientation. The birth mother was the consistent birth family member to keep in touch with the adoptive family, and significantly influenced the shaping of open adoption relationships.[26]

Public opinion Edit

A 2007 poll by CNN and Opinion Research Corporation found that 57% of respondents believed that same-sex couples should have the right to adopt, while 40% felt that they should not.[27] More recently, a Gallup poll from May 2014 found that 63% of respondents believed same-sex couples should have the legal right to adopt a child.[28]

From 1994 to 2012, seven national polling organizations asked representative samples of Americans their opinions about the legalization of same-sex adoption, with the main question being, "Do you think there should or should not be adoption rights [such as] gays and lesbians so they can legally adopt children?" Results from this period indicate an increase in support as time progressed. In 1994 survey responses, about one in four (28%) favored same-sex adoption, while in 2012 about five in ten (50%) favored same-sex adoption. In studies from 1994 to 1999, only one out of every three Americans (33%) favored same-sex adoption; from 2002 to 2008, support increased to four in ten (40% favorability). From 2009 to 2012, a majority (from 52% to 61%) approved legalizing same-gender adoption,[29] with greater support expressed among young people than among those over 65 years of age.[29] Results also showed that 85% of the Democrats asked were in support of same-sex adoption, while only 23% of the Republicans asked were in support of it.[29]

In June 2018, a YouGov poll found that over half of Americans (55%) believed that heterosexual and homosexual couples would be equally good parents. Majorities also supported allowing gay (53%) and lesbian (55%) couples to adopt and raise children. When asked whether gay and straight couples can be equally good parents, 38% of respondents “strongly” agreed. Women (47%) were significantly more likely than men (30%) to strongly agree with this statement. Most respondents (57%), however, also expressed the belief that a child should be raised by both a mother and a father. Another 15% “strongly” or “somewhat” disagreed with that idea. In this case, men (47%) were more likely than women (30%) to strongly agree with the statement that children should be raised by a mother and father. When asked if lesbian couples should be able to adopt and raise children, 55% said yes while 29% said no. When asked about gay male couples, 53% agreed and 32% disagreed. In both instances, women were significantly more likely than men to agree to same-sex couple adoption. Almost half of Americans (47%) said that it was unfair that child welfare agencies can refuse to place a child with a same-sex couple based on religious objection, while one-third (33%) said it was fair. Forty-six percent supported a Connecticut initiative to recruit members of the LGBTQ+ community to become foster and adoptive parents, but twenty-nine percent opposed that measure.[30]

Research conducted by Andrew L. Whitehead and Samuel L. Perry suggests that rising support of adoption by same-sex couples does not indicate changing normative stereotypes about homosexuality. Even when asked questions that suggested that the well-being of the children of same-sex couples was lower, survey respondents tend to support adoption by same-sex parents. This research suggests that rising public support may not be a result of a growing acceptance of the LGBT community, but rather from the growing resentment towards state-funded foster programs. The same study also held that religious affiliations matter less for predicting same-sex adoption attitudes than how Americans practice and hold their faith; notably, support for same-sex adoption was lower among religious respondents who more frequently engage in practices such as religious service attendance and sacred text reading, with support higher among those who believe that the Bible may contain human error.[31]

Gallup's Values and Beliefs poll, which was conducted from May 3-18, 2021, recorded that 70% of Americans support same-sex marriage. Additionally, 87% support interracial marriage.[32] A YouGov survey conducted in May 2019 found that 49% of Americans think it is not okay for adoption and foster agencies to decline placing a child with a same-sex couple for religious reasons; however 36% of Americans said this was acceptable.[33]

In 2021 Ipsos created and shared a poll worldwide on the question "Do you agree that same-sex couples should have the same rights to adopt children as heterosexual couples do?" and the United States responded with seventy-two percent of them strongly/ somewhat agreeing with the statement, six percent responded with not sure, and twenty-two percent of them responded with strongly/ somewhat disagreeing with the statement.[34]

Professional organizations Edit

Professional organizations that support gay and lesbian families' adoption include the Child Welfare League of America, the American Psychiatric Association, the American Psychological Association, the American Academy of Pediatrics, and the National Association of Social Workers (NASW).The Child Welfare League of America (CWLA) affirms that "lesbian, gay, and bisexual parents are as well suited to raise children as their heterosexual counterparts".[35] American Psychiatric Association supports same-sex marriage as "being advantageous to the mental health of same-sex couples and supports legal recognition of the right for same-sex couples to marry, adopt and co-parent".[36] Each of these organizations released similar statements supporting same-sex adoption following the government legalization of same-sex adoption in all fifty states in 2016.[37]

Furthermore, there are many adoption agencies, lawyers, and social workers who work specifically to support LGBTQ+ parents, including AdoptUSKids, American Academy of Pediatrics, Human Rights Campaign Foundation, LifeLong Adoptions, A is 4 Adoption, International Lesbian and Gay Organization, National Center for Lesbian Rights, and the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force. The US Department of State provides these resources and more to those who are seeking state and federal adoption information.

Foundations and support organizations like the Dave Thomas Foundation for Adoption, and the National Adoption Foundation, have funded grants for same-sex couples, and other organizations that support the LGBTQ+ in adoption.

Politics Edit

On July 29, 1999, U.S. Representative Steve Largent introduced amendment 356 (H.Amdt. 356) to the District of Columbia Appropriations Act, 2000 (H.R. 2587), which would have banned joint adoption between individuals unrelated by blood or marriage in Washington, D.C. The amendment failed with 213 votes in favor and 215 opposed.

In 2004, Jeb Bush, the then-Governor of Florida, was quoted saying: "[I]t is in the best interest of adoptive children, many of whom come from troubled and unstable backgrounds, to be placed in a home anchored both by a father and a mother."[38]

On May 10, 2012, Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney told an interviewer: "And if two people of the same gender want to live together, want to have a loving relationship, or even to adopt a child – in my state individuals of the same sex were able to adopt children. In my view, that's something that people have a right to do." Asked the next day to reconcile that with his opposition to same-sex marriage, he said: "Well actually I think all states but one allow gay adoption, so that's a position which has been decided by most of the state legislators, including the one in my state some time ago. So I simply acknowledge the fact that gay adoption is legal in all states but one."[39]

Currently,[when?] there are legal appeals in a number of states to allow for co-parent adoption, commonly known as second-parent adoption, whereby one parent can adopt the biological child of their same-sex partner without voiding their partner's parental guardianship over the child.[40] This allows the child to be recognized as having two legal parents in cases where the couple is not in a relationship recognized by the state.[40] For the states that allow same-sex couples to adopt, most require that adoptive couples must be married; in the states without specific relevant laws, this issue is addressed based on the best interest of the Adoption and Safe Families Act of 1997 (H.R. 867).

Legal status Edit

Law on same-sex adoption Edit

Federal law Edit

On May 16, 2013, the Every Child Deserves a Family Act was introduced to Congress but was not enacted.[41] The act would have stipulated that any organization that deals with foster and adoptive care of children and has some form of funding from the federal government could not discriminate against "prospective adoptive or foster parents solely on the basis of their sexual orientation, gender identification, or marital status or on the basis of the sexual orientation or gender identity of the child involved."[42] As the bill only applied to centers that were federally funded, however, private institutions would still have been able to refuse same-sex couples from adopting. In January 2019, the state of South Carolina applied for and was granted a waiver to let adoption agencies block same-sex couples from adopting or becoming foster parents. A Greenville couple has filed a lawsuit in this case and its outcome is pending.[43]

Supreme Court cases, like Baker v. State (1999) and Varnum v. Brien (2009), have set a precedent for same-sex parents of adopted children by siding with them, however states still have individual jurisdiction.[44]

State law Edit

As of 2021, each state is able to make its own laws about LGBTQ discrimination in foster care, second-parent adoption, and parental presumption in same-sex relationships. Many states continue to explicitly allow discrimination within the foster care system and adoption placement or have no laws to prevent discrimination. Most states also do not require training for foster parents regarding LGBTQ youth. Many states also do not permit second-parent adoptions for same-sex couples regardless of whether their relationship is legally recognized. Other states do not presume that a parental relationship exists with any children born of that marriage for both parents in a same-sex marriage as they would for children born of an opposite-sex relationship.[1]

Laws Regarding LGBT Adoptions by State[1]
State Second Parent Adoption Foster Care Non-Discrimination Laws Foster Care Parent Training Required Parental Presumption for Same-Sex Couples Laws Permitting Discrimination in Adoption/Foster Placement
Alabama No No No No Yes
Alaska No No No Yes No
Arizona No No No Yes Yes
Arkansas No No No No No
California Yes Yes Yes Yes No
Colorado Yes Yes No Yes No
Connecticut Yes Yes No Yes No
Delaware Yes No No Yes No
District of Columbia Yes Yes Yes Yes No
Florida No No No Yes No
Georgia No No No No No
Hawaii No No No Yes No
Idaho Yes No No No No
Illinois Yes Yes No Yes No
Indiana No No No Yes No
Iowa No Yes No Yes No
Kansas No No No No No
Kentucky No No No No No
Louisiana No No No No No
Maine Yes No No Yes No
Maryland Yes No No No No
Massachusetts Yes Yes Yes Yes No
Michigan No No No No Yes
Minnesota No Yes Yes Yes No
Mississippi No No No No Yes
Missouri No No No No No
Montana Yes No No No Yes
Nebraska No No No No No
Nevada No No Yes Yes No
New Hampshire Yes Yes No Yes No
New Jersey Yes Yes No Yes No
New Mexico No Yes Yes Yes No
New York Yes Yes No Yes No
North Carolina No No No Yes No
North Dakota No No No No Yes
Ohio No Yes No No No
Oklahoma No No No No Yes
Oregon Yes Yes No Yes No
Pennsylvania Yes No No No No
Rhode Island Yes Yes No Yes No
South Carolina No No No No Yes
South Dakota Yes No No No Yes
Tennessee No No No No Yes
Texas No No No Yes Yes
Utah No No Yes Yes No
Vermont Yes Yes No Yes No
Virginia No No No No Yes
Washington No No No Yes No
West Virginia No No No No No
Wisconsin No Yes No Yes No
Wyoming No No No No No

Cases Edit

Alabama Edit

On October 12, 2012, the Alabama Court of Civil Appeals unanimously turned down the request of a woman to adopt her same-sex spouse's child. The couple had been married in California. The court held that Alabama law did not recognize the women as spouses.[45]

V.L. v. E.L. Edit

On September 18, 2015, the Supreme Court of Alabama reversed lower courts' recognition of an adoption judgment granted to a same-sex couple over their three children in 2007 by the Superior Court of Fulton County, Georgia. The court ruled that the Georgia state court had misapplied Georgia state law in granting the adoption. In the case of V.L. v. E.L., the Supreme Court of Alabama sided with E.L., the biological mother of the three children (who argued the Georgia court lacked subject matter jurisdiction). The Supreme Court voided the adoption decree's recognition in-state and nullified V.L.'s parental rights. On November 16, V.L. petitioned the United States Supreme Court to allow her to see her children while she appealed. On December 14, the Supreme Court granted her request for a stay of the ruling pending their disposition of V.L.'s petition for a writ of certiorari. This was the first adoption case that reached the Supreme Court after Obergefell v. Hodges.[46]

On March 7, 2016, the United States Supreme Court unanimously reversed the Supreme Court of Alabama. The court ruled that the Alabama Supreme Court violated the Full Faith and Credit Clause when it refused to recognize the adoption decree from Georgia. The U.S. Supreme Court's decision caused the adoption decree from Georgia to be recognized in Alabama, and V.L.'s parental rights were restored. The case was remanded to the Supreme Court of Alabama for further proceedings.[47]

Arkansas Edit

On November 4, 2008, Arkansas voters approved Act 1, a measure to ban anyone "cohabitating outside of a valid marriage" from being foster parents or adopting children. Although the law could apply to heterosexual couples, it was believed to have been written to target gay couples due to the fact that same-sex marriage was prohibited in that state, thereby making an adoption impossible,[48] although single gay men and lesbians were still allowed to adopt in Arkansas. The law was overturned on April 16, 2010 by state judge Chris Piazza.[49] The Arkansas Supreme Court in Arkansas Department of Human Services v. Cole upheld the lower court's decision on April 7, 2011.[50]

State Circuit Judge Tim Fox of Pulaski County ruled on December 1, 2015 that a state law restricting parental identification on birth certificates to heterosexual couples was unconstitutional. His ruling initially applied only to the three couples who originally sued in this case, Pavan v. Smith. Two days later, he broadened the ruling to apply statewide. On December 10, 2015, the Supreme Court of Arkansas stayed the statewide applicability, but allowed the three plaintiff couples to receive their amended certificates.[51] On December 9, 2016, the Supreme Court of Arkansas reversed the trial court's order.[52]

On June 26, 2017, the U.S. Supreme Court granted the petition for a writ of certiorari sought by the plaintiff's parents and reversed the Arkansas Supreme Court. The Court held by a 6-3 vote that Arkansas' law only allowing for opposite-sex couples to be named on their children's birth certificates was an unconstitutional breach of their ruling in Obergefell v. Hodges.[citation needed]

Florida Edit

In Florida, a 1977 law prohibited adoption by homosexuals following the anti-gay Save Our Children campaign led by Anita Bryant. In November 2008, a state circuit court struck down the law through In re: Gill, a case involving a gay male couple raising two foster children placed with them in 2004 by state child welfare workers.[53] Through an appeal on September 22, 2010, Florida's Third District Court of Appeals unanimously upheld the decision of the lower court. The state did not appeal.[54] The 1977 law that banned homosexuals from adoption was repealed on July 1, 2015.[55]

In 2015, a case was brought before federal District Judge Robert Hinkle of the United States District Court for the Northern District of Florida. The Florida Department of Health refused to issue a birth certificate recognizing both partners in a same-sex relationship. The plaintiffs in the case asked Judge Hinkle to declare this policy unconstitutional. He set a deadline of January 6, 2016, for the Department of Health to reply to the plaintiffs' motion for summary judgment. In January 2017, Florida reached a settlement with the plaintiffs, agreeing to issue correct birth certificates to all married same-sex couples on an equal basis.[56]

Idaho Edit

In 2013, a lesbian couple, married in California but since moved to Idaho, petitioned for second-parent adoption. A state magistrate denied the petition on the grounds that Idaho did not recognize their marriage. On appeal, the Idaho Supreme Court unanimously reversed the magistrate's ruling because Idaho has no specific statutory ban on unmarried second-parent adoption.[57]

Illinois Edit

Second parent adoption for LGBT couples in Illinois became legal in 1995 after a ruling in favor of K.M. and D.M. (a lesbian couple) to adopt Olivia M. (the biological child of K.M.), and K.L. and M.M. (another lesbian couple) to adopt Michael M. and David M. (David is the biological child of K.L. and Michael is the adoptive child of K.L.).[58] In this case, the court "held that unmarried same-sex cohabitants have standing to jointly petition for adoption as the statutory provisions allow a reputable person of legal age to adopt, and provisions in the singular should be read to include the plural".[44] They argued that because Illinois adoption law explicitly calls for liberal interpretation and a focus on the best interest of the child, the adoptions should be legal. Even though was not likely initially intended to allow for LGBT couples to adopt, they argued that other states (such as Vermont) with similar laws had ruled in favor of second parent adoptions for unmarried LGBT couples and that if the legislature specifically wanted to prevent such an adoption, they could have written the law as such.[59]

Indiana Edit

On June 30, 2016, a federal judge ruled in Henderson v. Box that Indiana must allow same-sex couples to list both their names on their children's birth certificates. The ruling came as a result of a federal lawsuit filed by eight same-sex couples who were unable to list the non-gestational parent's name on the child's birth certificate. When an opposite-sex couple had a child, the state granted a "presumption of parenthood" to the father and listed him on the birth certificate. However, when a same-sex couple had a child, the state denied that presumption and forced the second partner to undergo an adoption, a "long, arduous and expensive" process.[60][61] In January 2017, Attorney General Curtis Hill appealed the ruling to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit,[62][63] which unanimously upheld it on January 17, 2020.[64][65] In December 2020, the SCOTUS declined the case (and that means automatically upheld the previous 7th Circuit rulings).[66]

Kansas Edit

In November 2012, the Kansas Court of Appeals ruled in the case In the Matter of the Adoption of I.M. that a single person who is not a biological parent of a child cannot petition to adopt that child without terminating the other parent's parental rights. Since Kansas did not recognize same-sex marriages, this ruling effectively prevents same-sex couples from second-parent adoption in Kansas.[67] However, the Kansas Supreme Court ruled on February 22, 2013, in Frazier v. Goudschaal, that a partner of a biological parent is entitled to parental rights.[68]

Michigan Edit

In December 2012, the Michigan Court of Appeals ruled that the state's adoption code permits second parent adoptions by same-sex couples.[69]

A female same-sex couple, who were raising three children and adopted one of them, filed a lawsuit in federal court in January 2012 seeking to have the state's ban on adoption by same-sex couples overturned,[70] and in September amended that suit to challenge the state's ban on same-sex marriage as well.[71]

On June 26, 2015, the Supreme Court of the United States ultimately ruled in their favor in Obergefell v. Hodges.[citation needed]

Mississippi Edit

33% of Mississippi's households headed by same-sex couples include a child, the highest such percentage in the nation.[72] Nevertheless, Mississippi's Domestic Relations Code states, "Adoption by couples of the same gender is prohibited."[73] A lawsuit, Campaign for Southern Equality v. Mississippi Department of Human Services, was filed in August 2015 by four Mississippi same-sex couples seeking to overturn this law.[74] The plaintiffs in that case were represented by Roberta Kaplan, who successfully argued United States v. Windsor before the U.S. Supreme Court. Mississippi was the only U.S. state to not have legal joint adoption rights for LGBT couples; the only other jurisdictions under U.S. sovereignty where this is the case are American Samoa and some Native American tribal nations.[75]

Mississippi passed a state law in 2000 which explicitly prohibited same-sex couples from joint adoption. After Obergefell, Mississippi has specifically stated that its ban remains in effect. On August 12, 2015, the Southern Poverty Law Center, joined by four same-sex couples raising children, filed suit in the United States District Court for the Southern District of Mississippi seeking to declare the statute unconstitutional.[76] On March 31, 2016, Judge Daniel P. Jordan III issued a preliminary injunction striking down Mississippi's ban on same-sex couples from adoption, ruling that the ban violates the Equal Protection Clause. There were no immediate plans by the state of Mississippi to appeal the ruling to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit.[77]

Nebraska Edit

Three same-sex couples filed a lawsuit against the state on August 27, 2013, seeking the right to serve as foster and adoptive parents. The lawsuit claimed that the state's policy against allowing two unrelated adults to adopt has been consistently enforced only against same-sex couples.[78]

New York Edit

An October 2012 court ruling in a custody dispute between two women in a same-sex relationship awarded custody to the adoptive parent rather than the biological mother.[79]

Wisconsin Edit

In Wisconsin, the state has allowed both parents to be on the birth certificate, but refuses to change the wordage from "father and mother" to a gender-neutral "parent 1 and parent 2." In another case, a couple was outright rejected in their request. A federal lawsuit has been filed challenging this refusal.[80] There is also a state lawsuit, Torres v. Rhoades, challenging the birth certificate wordage. On November 4, a judge dismissed Torres because the couple initiated the case as an adoption, but the judge ruled they did not properly attack the constitutionality of the statutes that used the term "father and mother" or "husband and wife." On November 17, the Second District Court of Appeal in Wisconsin agreed with the lower court. The couple could now appeal the case to the Supreme Court of Wisconsin or they could go back to the trial court with a case challenging the constitutionality of the statutes that require the terms "father and mother."[citation needed]

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Additional sources Edit

  • Ball, Carlos A. (2012). The Right to Be Parents: LGBT Families and the Transformation of Parenthood. New York University Press. ISBN 978-0814739303.
  • Eilperin, Juliet (July 11, 2013). "Another front in the gay rights battle". The Washington Post. Archived from the original on July 12, 2013.

same, adoption, united, states, until, 2017, laws, related, lgbtq, couples, adopting, children, varied, state, some, states, granted, full, adoption, rights, same, couples, while, others, banned, same, adoption, only, allowed, partner, same, relationship, adop. Until 2017 laws related to LGBTQ couples adopting children varied by state Some states granted full adoption rights to same sex couples while others banned same sex adoption or only allowed one partner in a same sex relationship to adopt the biological child of the other Despite these rulings same sex couples and members of the LGBTQ community still face discrimination when attempting to foster children 1 On 31 March 2016 Federal District Court struck down Mississippi s ban on same sex couple adoptions 2 On June 26 2017 the United States Supreme Court reversed an Arkansas Supreme Court ruling that allowed a law listing parents by gender on birth certificates to stand The new SCOTUS ruling allowed both same sex spouses to be listed on birth certificates 3 These court rulings made adoption by same sex couples legal in all 50 states In 2022 Congress passed the Respect for Marriage Act which requires that states respect marriage licenses of same sex couples as long as the marriage was valid in the state in which it was performed This act repeals the 1996 Defense of Marriage Act which defined marriage as the union of one man and one woman and allowed states to decline to recognize same sex marriages that were performed in other states The Respect for Marriage Act will legally defend the rights and protections which LGBTQ and interracial couples and their children are entitled 4 Attitudes toward same sex parenting have improved as the number of same sex couples and same sex parenting overall has increased in the United States From 2007 to 2011 public condemnation of same sex parenting in the U S dropped from 50 to 35 while acceptance has remained relatively stable 5 In 2023 same sex couples were more likely to raise an adopted child 4 of adopted children and 3 of foster children were being raised by LGBTQ couples After Mississippi was the last state to overturn laws banning LGBTQ adoption and the federal marriage equality ruling in 2015 there are now protection rights for same sex couples to adopt throughout the United States which has brought more acceptance and support for same sex couples when adopting children 6 Studies have found that same sex couples often favor adoption as the method for starting a family They tend to place significantly less emphasis on the biological methods of conceiving a child than heterosexual families do LGBTQ families are up to 10 times more likely to adopt than heterosexual couples Additionally an organization called Creating A Family reported that 60 of adoptions by LGBTQ families are transracial One study even found that gay and lesbian parents were more likely than heterosexual parents to be matched with hard to place children partially because they were more open to being matched with children with hard to place profiles 7 Some argue that these statistics are due in some part to discriminatory practices that make it more difficult to adopt for LGBTQ families and deem minority children less ideal adoptees Contents 1 Background 2 Statistics 3 Professional assessment 4 Public opinion 5 Professional organizations 6 Politics 7 Legal status 7 1 Law on same sex adoption 7 1 1 Federal law 7 1 2 State law 7 2 Cases 7 2 1 Alabama 7 2 1 1 V L v E L 7 2 2 Arkansas 7 2 3 Florida 7 2 4 Idaho 7 2 5 Illinois 7 2 6 Indiana 7 2 7 Kansas 7 2 8 Michigan 7 2 9 Mississippi 7 2 10 Nebraska 7 2 11 New York 7 2 12 Wisconsin 8 References 9 Additional sourcesBackground EditOn April 6 1999 the American Civil Liberties Union ACLU published Overview of Lesbian and Gay Parenting Adoption and Foster Care Key findings included 8 There is no evidence to suggest that lesbians and gay men are less fit to be parents than heterosexual couples Home environments with lesbian and gay parents are just as likely to successfully support a child s development as those with heterosexual parents Good parenting is not influenced by sexual orientation Rather it is influenced most profoundly by a parent s ability to create a loving and nurturing home an ability that does not depend on whether the parent is gay or straight There is no evidence to suggest that the children of lesbian and gay parents are less intelligent suffer from more problems are less popular or have lower self esteem than children of heterosexual parents Children of lesbian and gay parents grow up as happy healthy and well adjusted as the children of heterosexual parents 9 Some researchers have written that children of gay and lesbian families are often subjected to teasing and harassment in their peer groups 10 11 They also tend to be singled out and questioned about their family life more than children in heteronormative homes 12 Formerly many children raised by same sex parents had been born into one of their parents previous heterosexual relationships 13 As such many prior legal disputes were over child custody in cases of divorce There were biases against the parent who was in a now same sex relationship these biases caused courts to disfavor them in awarding custody and visitation rights The sexual orientation of the LGBTQ parent and not their ability to provide for the child s needs was viewed as having a negative impact on the child s upbringing 13 Similar to intrauterine insemination using a sperm donor the introduction of in vitro fertilization enabled lesbian couples to raise children of their own who had not been born from heterosexual relationships 13 The development of in vitro fertilization created controversy about co parent adoption and in cases where lesbian couples separated child custody The practice also generated controversy about the presumption of parenthood when a woman in a heterosexual marriage gives birth her husband is legally presumed to be the child s father but courts have only recently extended this privilege to lesbian couples 14 For male same sex couples becoming a parent can be more costly because surrogacy is the only way for them to have a biological child 15 As such adoption is generally the more cost effective alternative for same sex couples The average cost of adoption is around 30 000 while surrogacy starts around 100 000 and can be upwards of 150 000 making adoption the more affordable option 16 Statistics EditIn 2020 the United States Census Bureau determined that same sex couples 3 1 are three times more likely to have adopted children than opposite sex couples 1 1 Data from 2019 revealed that 43 3 of same sex couples children were adopted and or stepchildren Approximately 20 9 of same sex couples had adoptive children compared to the 2 9 of opposite sex couples that also had adoptive children 17 According to the Williams Institute as of 2009 an estimated 20 000 same sex couples are raising nearly 30 000 adopted children 18 As of 2011 about two million children in the U S were being raised by LGBT parents but could not establish a legal relationship with both parents 19 In 2019 the American Community Survey revealed that female same sex households were more likely to have children under 18 in their care 22 5 than male same sex households 6 6 20 Professional assessment EditMain article LGBT parenting There is consensus among the medical psychological and social welfare communities that children raised by gay and lesbian parents are just as likely to be well adjusted as those raised by heterosexual parents 21 and research to support this conclusion is accepted beyond debate in the field of developmental psychology 22 In 2010 the Third District Court of Appeals of the State of Florida concluded that based on the robust nature of the evidence available in the field the issue is so far beyond dispute that it would be irrational to hold otherwise the best interests of children are not preserved by prohibiting homosexual adoption 23 The most important factors in maintaining a child s welfare depend more on socioeconomic status and less on the gender and sexuality of the parents Issues arise from uncontrolled factors such as discrimination or the inability of parents to get married 24 Some individuals who oppose child rearing by gay and lesbian couples fear that it will result in the child becoming gay or lesbian themselves Established data however does not support this claim 25 A qualitative study by Goldberg Kinkler Richardson and Downing surveyed couples in same sex and heterosexual relationships who had adopted children through open adoption This was notable as little prior research had focused on gender and sexual orientation in open adoption relationships Data from 90 individuals including 30 women in 15 lesbian relationships 30 men in 15 gay relationships as well as 15 women and 15 men in heterosexual relationships were analyzed All couples were adopting their first child and they were all first time parents The study was conducted within the borders of the United States Participants filled out a questionnaire and were interviewed by telephone three to four months after adopting their child All participants were between the ages of 27 and 52 average 37 7 years and 90 were Caucasian Results indicated that gay and lesbian couples tended to emphasize openness and a desire to pursue adoption without hiding their sexual orientation The birth mother was the consistent birth family member to keep in touch with the adoptive family and significantly influenced the shaping of open adoption relationships 26 Public opinion EditA 2007 poll by CNN and Opinion Research Corporation found that 57 of respondents believed that same sex couples should have the right to adopt while 40 felt that they should not 27 More recently a Gallup poll from May 2014 found that 63 of respondents believed same sex couples should have the legal right to adopt a child 28 From 1994 to 2012 seven national polling organizations asked representative samples of Americans their opinions about the legalization of same sex adoption with the main question being Do you think there should or should not be adoption rights such as gays and lesbians so they can legally adopt children Results from this period indicate an increase in support as time progressed In 1994 survey responses about one in four 28 favored same sex adoption while in 2012 about five in ten 50 favored same sex adoption In studies from 1994 to 1999 only one out of every three Americans 33 favored same sex adoption from 2002 to 2008 support increased to four in ten 40 favorability From 2009 to 2012 a majority from 52 to 61 approved legalizing same gender adoption 29 with greater support expressed among young people than among those over 65 years of age 29 Results also showed that 85 of the Democrats asked were in support of same sex adoption while only 23 of the Republicans asked were in support of it 29 In June 2018 a YouGov poll found that over half of Americans 55 believed that heterosexual and homosexual couples would be equally good parents Majorities also supported allowing gay 53 and lesbian 55 couples to adopt and raise children When asked whether gay and straight couples can be equally good parents 38 of respondents strongly agreed Women 47 were significantly more likely than men 30 to strongly agree with this statement Most respondents 57 however also expressed the belief that a child should be raised by both a mother and a father Another 15 strongly or somewhat disagreed with that idea In this case men 47 were more likely than women 30 to strongly agree with the statement that children should be raised by a mother and father When asked if lesbian couples should be able to adopt and raise children 55 said yes while 29 said no When asked about gay male couples 53 agreed and 32 disagreed In both instances women were significantly more likely than men to agree to same sex couple adoption Almost half of Americans 47 said that it was unfair that child welfare agencies can refuse to place a child with a same sex couple based on religious objection while one third 33 said it was fair Forty six percent supported a Connecticut initiative to recruit members of the LGBTQ community to become foster and adoptive parents but twenty nine percent opposed that measure 30 Research conducted by Andrew L Whitehead and Samuel L Perry suggests that rising support of adoption by same sex couples does not indicate changing normative stereotypes about homosexuality Even when asked questions that suggested that the well being of the children of same sex couples was lower survey respondents tend to support adoption by same sex parents This research suggests that rising public support may not be a result of a growing acceptance of the LGBT community but rather from the growing resentment towards state funded foster programs The same study also held that religious affiliations matter less for predicting same sex adoption attitudes than how Americans practice and hold their faith notably support for same sex adoption was lower among religious respondents who more frequently engage in practices such as religious service attendance and sacred text reading with support higher among those who believe that the Bible may contain human error 31 Gallup s Values and Beliefs poll which was conducted from May 3 18 2021 recorded that 70 of Americans support same sex marriage Additionally 87 support interracial marriage 32 A YouGov survey conducted in May 2019 found that 49 of Americans think it is not okay for adoption and foster agencies to decline placing a child with a same sex couple for religious reasons however 36 of Americans said this was acceptable 33 In 2021 Ipsos created and shared a poll worldwide on the question Do you agree that same sex couples should have the same rights to adopt children as heterosexual couples do and the United States responded with seventy two percent of them strongly somewhat agreeing with the statement six percent responded with not sure and twenty two percent of them responded with strongly somewhat disagreeing with the statement 34 Professional organizations EditThis section needs expansion with additional information about how these organizations have supported adoption as well as citations You can help by adding to it Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page September 2021 Professional organizations that support gay and lesbian families adoption include the Child Welfare League of America the American Psychiatric Association the American Psychological Association the American Academy of Pediatrics and the National Association of Social Workers NASW The Child Welfare League of America CWLA affirms that lesbian gay and bisexual parents are as well suited to raise children as their heterosexual counterparts 35 American Psychiatric Association supports same sex marriage as being advantageous to the mental health of same sex couples and supports legal recognition of the right for same sex couples to marry adopt and co parent 36 Each of these organizations released similar statements supporting same sex adoption following the government legalization of same sex adoption in all fifty states in 2016 37 Furthermore there are many adoption agencies lawyers and social workers who work specifically to support LGBTQ parents including AdoptUSKids American Academy of Pediatrics Human Rights Campaign Foundation LifeLong Adoptions A is 4 Adoption International Lesbian and Gay Organization National Center for Lesbian Rights and the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force The US Department of State provides these resources and more to those who are seeking state and federal adoption information Foundations and support organizations like the Dave Thomas Foundation for Adoption and the National Adoption Foundation have funded grants for same sex couples and other organizations that support the LGBTQ in adoption Politics EditOn July 29 1999 U S Representative Steve Largent introduced amendment 356 H Amdt 356 to the District of Columbia Appropriations Act 2000 H R 2587 which would have banned joint adoption between individuals unrelated by blood or marriage in Washington D C The amendment failed with 213 votes in favor and 215 opposed In 2004 Jeb Bush the then Governor of Florida was quoted saying I t is in the best interest of adoptive children many of whom come from troubled and unstable backgrounds to be placed in a home anchored both by a father and a mother 38 On May 10 2012 Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney told an interviewer And if two people of the same gender want to live together want to have a loving relationship or even to adopt a child in my state individuals of the same sex were able to adopt children In my view that s something that people have a right to do Asked the next day to reconcile that with his opposition to same sex marriage he said Well actually I think all states but one allow gay adoption so that s a position which has been decided by most of the state legislators including the one in my state some time ago So I simply acknowledge the fact that gay adoption is legal in all states but one 39 Currently when there are legal appeals in a number of states to allow for co parent adoption commonly known as second parent adoption whereby one parent can adopt the biological child of their same sex partner without voiding their partner s parental guardianship over the child 40 This allows the child to be recognized as having two legal parents in cases where the couple is not in a relationship recognized by the state 40 For the states that allow same sex couples to adopt most require that adoptive couples must be married in the states without specific relevant laws this issue is addressed based on the best interest of the Adoption and Safe Families Act of 1997 H R 867 Legal status EditLaw on same sex adoption Edit Federal law Edit On May 16 2013 the Every Child Deserves a Family Act was introduced to Congress but was not enacted 41 The act would have stipulated that any organization that deals with foster and adoptive care of children and has some form of funding from the federal government could not discriminate against prospective adoptive or foster parents solely on the basis of their sexual orientation gender identification or marital status or on the basis of the sexual orientation or gender identity of the child involved 42 As the bill only applied to centers that were federally funded however private institutions would still have been able to refuse same sex couples from adopting In January 2019 the state of South Carolina applied for and was granted a waiver to let adoption agencies block same sex couples from adopting or becoming foster parents A Greenville couple has filed a lawsuit in this case and its outcome is pending 43 Supreme Court cases like Baker v State 1999 and Varnum v Brien 2009 have set a precedent for same sex parents of adopted children by siding with them however states still have individual jurisdiction 44 State law Edit As of 2021 each state is able to make its own laws about LGBTQ discrimination in foster care second parent adoption and parental presumption in same sex relationships Many states continue to explicitly allow discrimination within the foster care system and adoption placement or have no laws to prevent discrimination Most states also do not require training for foster parents regarding LGBTQ youth Many states also do not permit second parent adoptions for same sex couples regardless of whether their relationship is legally recognized Other states do not presume that a parental relationship exists with any children born of that marriage for both parents in a same sex marriage as they would for children born of an opposite sex relationship 1 Laws Regarding LGBT Adoptions by State 1 State Second Parent Adoption Foster Care Non Discrimination Laws Foster Care Parent Training Required Parental Presumption for Same Sex Couples Laws Permitting Discrimination in Adoption Foster PlacementAlabama No No No No YesAlaska No No No Yes NoArizona No No No Yes YesArkansas No No No No NoCalifornia Yes Yes Yes Yes NoColorado Yes Yes No Yes NoConnecticut Yes Yes No Yes NoDelaware Yes No No Yes NoDistrict of Columbia Yes Yes Yes Yes NoFlorida No No No Yes NoGeorgia No No No No NoHawaii No No No Yes NoIdaho Yes No No No NoIllinois Yes Yes No Yes NoIndiana No No No Yes NoIowa No Yes No Yes NoKansas No No No No NoKentucky No No No No NoLouisiana No No No No NoMaine Yes No No Yes NoMaryland Yes No No No NoMassachusetts Yes Yes Yes Yes NoMichigan No No No No YesMinnesota No Yes Yes Yes NoMississippi No No No No YesMissouri No No No No NoMontana Yes No No No YesNebraska No No No No NoNevada No No Yes Yes NoNew Hampshire Yes Yes No Yes NoNew Jersey Yes Yes No Yes NoNew Mexico No Yes Yes Yes NoNew York Yes Yes No Yes NoNorth Carolina No No No Yes NoNorth Dakota No No No No YesOhio No Yes No No NoOklahoma No No No No YesOregon Yes Yes No Yes NoPennsylvania Yes No No No NoRhode Island Yes Yes No Yes NoSouth Carolina No No No No YesSouth Dakota Yes No No No YesTennessee No No No No YesTexas No No No Yes YesUtah No No Yes Yes NoVermont Yes Yes No Yes NoVirginia No No No No YesWashington No No No Yes NoWest Virginia No No No No NoWisconsin No Yes No Yes NoWyoming No No No No NoCases Edit Alabama Edit On October 12 2012 the Alabama Court of Civil Appeals unanimously turned down the request of a woman to adopt her same sex spouse s child The couple had been married in California The court held that Alabama law did not recognize the women as spouses 45 V L v E L Edit Main article V L v E L On September 18 2015 the Supreme Court of Alabama reversed lower courts recognition of an adoption judgment granted to a same sex couple over their three children in 2007 by the Superior Court of Fulton County Georgia The court ruled that the Georgia state court had misapplied Georgia state law in granting the adoption In the case of V L v E L the Supreme Court of Alabama sided with E L the biological mother of the three children who argued the Georgia court lacked subject matter jurisdiction The Supreme Court voided the adoption decree s recognition in state and nullified V L s parental rights On November 16 V L petitioned the United States Supreme Court to allow her to see her children while she appealed On December 14 the Supreme Court granted her request for a stay of the ruling pending their disposition of V L s petition for a writ of certiorari This was the first adoption case that reached the Supreme Court after Obergefell v Hodges 46 On March 7 2016 the United States Supreme Court unanimously reversed the Supreme Court of Alabama The court ruled that the Alabama Supreme Court violated the Full Faith and Credit Clause when it refused to recognize the adoption decree from Georgia The U S Supreme Court s decision caused the adoption decree from Georgia to be recognized in Alabama and V L s parental rights were restored The case was remanded to the Supreme Court of Alabama for further proceedings 47 Arkansas Edit On November 4 2008 Arkansas voters approved Act 1 a measure to ban anyone cohabitating outside of a valid marriage from being foster parents or adopting children Although the law could apply to heterosexual couples it was believed to have been written to target gay couples due to the fact that same sex marriage was prohibited in that state thereby making an adoption impossible 48 although single gay men and lesbians were still allowed to adopt in Arkansas The law was overturned on April 16 2010 by state judge Chris Piazza 49 The Arkansas Supreme Court in Arkansas Department of Human Services v Cole upheld the lower court s decision on April 7 2011 50 State Circuit Judge Tim Fox of Pulaski County ruled on December 1 2015 that a state law restricting parental identification on birth certificates to heterosexual couples was unconstitutional His ruling initially applied only to the three couples who originally sued in this case Pavan v Smith Two days later he broadened the ruling to apply statewide On December 10 2015 the Supreme Court of Arkansas stayed the statewide applicability but allowed the three plaintiff couples to receive their amended certificates 51 On December 9 2016 the Supreme Court of Arkansas reversed the trial court s order 52 On June 26 2017 the U S Supreme Court granted the petition for a writ of certiorari sought by the plaintiff s parents and reversed the Arkansas Supreme Court The Court held by a 6 3 vote that Arkansas law only allowing for opposite sex couples to be named on their children s birth certificates was an unconstitutional breach of their ruling in Obergefell v Hodges citation needed Florida Edit In Florida a 1977 law prohibited adoption by homosexuals following the anti gay Save Our Children campaign led by Anita Bryant In November 2008 a state circuit court struck down the law through In re Gill a case involving a gay male couple raising two foster children placed with them in 2004 by state child welfare workers 53 Through an appeal on September 22 2010 Florida s Third District Court of Appeals unanimously upheld the decision of the lower court The state did not appeal 54 The 1977 law that banned homosexuals from adoption was repealed on July 1 2015 55 In 2015 a case was brought before federal District Judge Robert Hinkle of the United States District Court for the Northern District of Florida The Florida Department of Health refused to issue a birth certificate recognizing both partners in a same sex relationship The plaintiffs in the case asked Judge Hinkle to declare this policy unconstitutional He set a deadline of January 6 2016 for the Department of Health to reply to the plaintiffs motion for summary judgment In January 2017 Florida reached a settlement with the plaintiffs agreeing to issue correct birth certificates to all married same sex couples on an equal basis 56 Idaho Edit In 2013 a lesbian couple married in California but since moved to Idaho petitioned for second parent adoption A state magistrate denied the petition on the grounds that Idaho did not recognize their marriage On appeal the Idaho Supreme Court unanimously reversed the magistrate s ruling because Idaho has no specific statutory ban on unmarried second parent adoption 57 Illinois Edit Second parent adoption for LGBT couples in Illinois became legal in 1995 after a ruling in favor of K M and D M a lesbian couple to adopt Olivia M the biological child of K M and K L and M M another lesbian couple to adopt Michael M and David M David is the biological child of K L and Michael is the adoptive child of K L 58 In this case the court held that unmarried same sex cohabitants have standing to jointly petition for adoption as the statutory provisions allow a reputable person of legal age to adopt and provisions in the singular should be read to include the plural 44 They argued that because Illinois adoption law explicitly calls for liberal interpretation and a focus on the best interest of the child the adoptions should be legal Even though was not likely initially intended to allow for LGBT couples to adopt they argued that other states such as Vermont with similar laws had ruled in favor of second parent adoptions for unmarried LGBT couples and that if the legislature specifically wanted to prevent such an adoption they could have written the law as such 59 Indiana Edit See also LGBT rights in Indiana Adoption and parenting On June 30 2016 a federal judge ruled in Henderson v Box that Indiana must allow same sex couples to list both their names on their children s birth certificates The ruling came as a result of a federal lawsuit filed by eight same sex couples who were unable to list the non gestational parent s name on the child s birth certificate When an opposite sex couple had a child the state granted a presumption of parenthood to the father and listed him on the birth certificate However when a same sex couple had a child the state denied that presumption and forced the second partner to undergo an adoption a long arduous and expensive process 60 61 In January 2017 Attorney General Curtis Hill appealed the ruling to the U S Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit 62 63 which unanimously upheld it on January 17 2020 64 65 In December 2020 the SCOTUS declined the case and that means automatically upheld the previous 7th Circuit rulings 66 Kansas Edit In November 2012 the Kansas Court of Appeals ruled in the case In the Matter of the Adoption of I M that a single person who is not a biological parent of a child cannot petition to adopt that child without terminating the other parent s parental rights Since Kansas did not recognize same sex marriages this ruling effectively prevents same sex couples from second parent adoption in Kansas 67 However the Kansas Supreme Court ruled on February 22 2013 in Frazier v Goudschaal that a partner of a biological parent is entitled to parental rights 68 Michigan Edit In December 2012 the Michigan Court of Appeals ruled that the state s adoption code permits second parent adoptions by same sex couples 69 A female same sex couple who were raising three children and adopted one of them filed a lawsuit in federal court in January 2012 seeking to have the state s ban on adoption by same sex couples overturned 70 and in September amended that suit to challenge the state s ban on same sex marriage as well 71 On June 26 2015 the Supreme Court of the United States ultimately ruled in their favor in Obergefell v Hodges citation needed Mississippi Edit 33 of Mississippi s households headed by same sex couples include a child the highest such percentage in the nation 72 Nevertheless Mississippi s Domestic Relations Code states Adoption by couples of the same gender is prohibited 73 A lawsuit Campaign for Southern Equality v Mississippi Department of Human Services was filed in August 2015 by four Mississippi same sex couples seeking to overturn this law 74 The plaintiffs in that case were represented by Roberta Kaplan who successfully argued United States v Windsor before the U S Supreme Court Mississippi was the only U S state to not have legal joint adoption rights for LGBT couples the only other jurisdictions under U S sovereignty where this is the case are American Samoa and some Native American tribal nations 75 Mississippi passed a state law in 2000 which explicitly prohibited same sex couples from joint adoption After Obergefell Mississippi has specifically stated that its ban remains in effect On August 12 2015 the Southern Poverty Law Center joined by four same sex couples raising children filed suit in the United States District Court for the Southern District of Mississippi seeking to declare the statute unconstitutional 76 On March 31 2016 Judge Daniel P Jordan III issued a preliminary injunction striking down Mississippi s ban on same sex couples from adoption ruling that the ban violates the Equal Protection Clause There were no immediate plans by the state of Mississippi to appeal the ruling to the U S Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit 77 Nebraska Edit Three same sex couples filed a lawsuit against the state on August 27 2013 seeking the right to serve as foster and adoptive parents The lawsuit claimed that the state s policy against allowing two unrelated adults to adopt has been consistently enforced only against same sex couples 78 New York Edit An October 2012 court ruling in a custody dispute between two women in a same sex relationship awarded custody to the adoptive parent rather than the biological mother 79 Wisconsin Edit This section needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information September 2021 In Wisconsin the state has allowed both parents to be on the birth certificate but refuses to change the wordage from father and mother to a gender neutral parent 1 and parent 2 In another case a couple was outright rejected in their request A federal lawsuit has been filed challenging this refusal 80 There is also a state lawsuit Torres v Rhoades challenging the birth certificate wordage On November 4 a judge dismissed Torres because the couple initiated the case as an adoption but the judge ruled they did not properly attack the constitutionality of the statutes that used the term father and mother or husband and wife On November 17 the Second District Court of Appeal in Wisconsin agreed with the lower court The couple could now appeal the case to the Supreme Court of Wisconsin or they could go back to the trial court with a case challenging the constitutionality of the statutes that require the terms father and mother citation needed References Edit a b c Warbelow Sarah Avant Courtnay Kutney Colin 2020 2020 State Equality Index A Review of State Legislation Affection the Lesbian Gay Bisexual Transgender and Queer Community and a Look Ahead in 2021 PDF Human Rights Campaign Retrieved January 28 2021 Barbash Fred April 1 2016 Federal judge voids Mississippi ban on same sex couple adoptions The Washington Post Retrieved May 24 2021 DeMillo Andrew June 26 2017 Supreme Court sides with same sex couples in Arkansas suit AP News Retrieved January 28 2021 Senate passes bill to protect same sex interracial marriages The Washington Post Rosentiel Tom May 13 2011 Most Say Homosexuality Should Be Accepted By Society The Washington Post Retrieved May 24 2021 American Adoptions LGBTQ Adoption Can Same Sex Couples Adopt www americanadoptions com Retrieved December 5 2022 Costa Pedro Alexandre Tasker Fiona Leal Isabel Pereira 2021 Different Placement Practices for Different Families Children s Adjustment in LGH Adoptive Families Frontiers in Psychology 12 649853 doi 10 3389 fpsyg 2021 649853 ISSN 1664 1078 PMC 8253556 PMID 34220622 Overview of Lesbian and Gay Parenting Adoption and Foster Care PDF Report American Civil Liberties Union April 6 1999 Archived from the original on September 16 2016 Retrieved September 24 2018 via Ball State University Hunt Albert R 1998 The Family Opposing Viewpoints San Diego Greenhaven Press pp 141 ISBN 978 1565106680 PsycNET psycnet apa org Retrieved December 4 2019 Rivers Daniel 2010 in the Best Interests of the Child Lesbian and Gay Parenting Custody Cases 1967 1985 Journal of Social History 43 4 917 943 doi 10 1353 jsh 0 0355 ISSN 0022 4529 JSTOR 40802011 S2CID 142144866 Guasp April 2010 Different families The experiences of children with lesbian and gay parents PDF Stonewall 1 24 a b c Ball Carlos 2012 The Right to Be Parents LGBT Families and the Transformation of Parenthood New York New York University Press ISBN 9780814739310 Presumption of Legitimacy of a Child in Same Sex Marriages Pace Law Library February 6 2018 Retrieved May 22 2021 Goldberg Abbie Moyer April February 2014 Adoption Lesbian and Gay Adoptive Parents Encyclopedia of Social Work doi 10 1093 acrefore 9780199975839 013 1132 ISBN 9780199975839 Adoption vs Surrogacy Cost Comparing Budgetary Options Family Inceptions October 18 2021 Retrieved March 16 2023 Bureau US Census Same Sex Couples Are More Likely to Adopt or Foster Children Census gov Retrieved December 5 2022 Experts Supreme Court adoption ruling puts in doubt about 90 000 adoptions by unmarried couples Press release Williams Institute October 11 2012 Retrieved July 24 2012 via Windy City Times Bernard Tara Siegel July 20 2012 A Family With Two Moms Except in the Eyes of the Law The New York Times Archived from the original on January 30 2013 Retrieved July 24 2012 Bureau US Census Same Sex Couples Are More Likely to Adopt or Foster Children Census gov Retrieved December 5 2022 United States District Court District of Massachusetts July 8 2010 In the United States District Court for the Northern District of California August 4 2010 PDF Archived from the original PDF on March 16 2013 Retrieved August 12 2012 Third District Court of Appeal State of Florida September 22 2010 PDF Archived October 10 2010 at the Wayback Machine Perrin Ellen March 2013 Promoting the Well Being of Children Whose Parents Are Gay or Lesbian PDF Pediatrics 131 4 e1374 83 doi 10 1542 peds 2013 0377 PMID 23519940 S2CID 23423249 Retrieved November 22 2015 Stacey Judith Biblarz Timothy April 2001 How Does the Sexual Orientation of Parents Matter American Sociological Review 66 2 159 183 doi 10 2307 2657413 JSTOR 2657413 S2CID 36206795 Goldberg Abbie E Kinkler Lori A Richardson Hannah B Downing Jordan B April 2011 Lesbian Gay and Heterosexual Couples in Open Adoption Arrangements A Qualitative Study PDF Journal of Marriage and Family 73 2 502 18 doi 10 1111 j 1741 3737 2010 00821 x Archived PDF from the original on March 20 2016 via Clark University McCain blasted for gay adoption opposition USA Today July 15 2008 Retrieved August 20 2013 Gay and Lesbian Rights Gallup September 14 2007 Retrieved August 22 2014 a b c Montero Darrel M October 2014 America s Progress in Achieving the Legalization of Same Gender Adoption Analysis of Public Opinion 1994 to 2012 Social Work 59 4 321 328 doi 10 1093 sw swu038 PMID 25365833 Ballard Jamie June 26 2018 Most Americans support gay couples adopting children YouGov Archived from the original on June 1 2019 Whitehead Andrew L Perry Samuel L 2016 Religion and Support for Adoption by Same Sex Couples Journal of Family Issues 37 6 789 813 doi 10 1177 0192513X14536564 S2CID 145583911 Inc Gallup June 8 2021 Record High 70 in U S Support Same Sex Marriage Gallup com Retrieved December 5 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a last has generic name help What Americans think about same sex couples and adoption YouGov today yougov com Retrieved December 5 2022 Views on adoption for same sex couples worldwide 2021 Statista Retrieved December 5 2022 Position Statement on Parenting of Children by Lesbian Gay and Bisexual Adults CWLA Retrieved December 5 2022 American Psychological Association Reiterates Support for Same Sex Marriage www apa org American Psychological Association 2010 Archived from the original on December 5 2022 Retrieved June 8 2023 Resources for LGBTI Adoptions travel state gov Retrieved December 5 2022 Swan Betsy May 22 2015 Jeb Bush s War on Gay Adoption The Daily Beast Archived from the original on October 17 2019 Retrieved December 8 2015 Shelley Matthew May 11 2012 Romney backs away from gay adoptions CBS News Archived from the original on July 31 2019 Retrieved July 24 2012 a b Adoption by LGBT Parents PDF National Center for Lesbian Rights June 2015 Retrieved November 23 2015 S 1382 114th Congress Every Child Deserves a Family Act Congress gov May 19 2015 Retrieved September 24 2018 H R 2028 113th Congress Every Child Deserves a Family Act Congress gov May 16 2013 Retrieved December 9 2015 Trump administration South Carolina sued over gay couple turned away by religious foster care agency ABC News May 31 2019 Retrieved January 23 2020 a b INDEX OF SECOND PARENT ADOPTION CASES PDF GLAD Retrieved January 24 2021 Johnson Bob October 12 2012 Court upholds Ala act banning same sex marriage The Mercury News Associated Press Archived from the original on January 28 2013 Retrieved October 13 2012 Case E L v V L NCLR org February 27 2015 Archived from the original on February 22 2019 Retrieved December 16 2015 Totenberg Nina March 7 2016 Same Sex Adoption Upheld By U S Supreme Court NPR Archived from the original on September 21 2018 Retrieved March 7 2016 Gay Adoption Ban Passes in Arkansas Archived February 6 2009 at the Wayback Machine Bartels Chuck April 16 2010 State judge overturns Ark adoption ban law Fox News Associated Press Archived from the original on April 23 2010 Retrieved October 17 2019 Terkel Amanda April 7 2011 Arkansas Supreme Court Strikes Down Ban On Gay Adoptions The Huffington Post Archived from the original on October 17 2019 Retrieved July 24 2012 Terkel Amanda December 2 2015 Arkansas Refuses To List Same Sex Parents On Birth Certificates Despite Judge s Ruling The Huffington Post Retrieved April 9 2016 On appeal gay pairs lose birth papers case in Arkansas high court Arkansas Online December 9 2016 Retrieved May 14 2021 Miami judge rules against Fla gay adoption ban USA Today Associated Press November 25 2008 Archived from the original on February 5 2013 Retrieved April 9 2016 Schwartz John September 22 2010 Florida Court Calls Ban on Gay Adoptions Unlawful The New York Times Archived from the original on October 24 2014 Retrieved November 23 2014 FARRINGTON ap BRENDAN June 11 2015 Gay adoption ban stricken from Florida laws after four decades LGBTQ Nation Retrieved May 14 2021 Saunders Jim December 16 2015 Same sex couples seek ruling in birth certificate dispute News4Jax Archived from the original on March 4 2016 Retrieved April 9 2016 Popkey Dan February 10 2014 Idaho Supreme Court sides with Boise lesbian couple in adoption case Idaho Statesman Archived from the original on November 24 2014 Retrieved November 22 2014 Petition of KM 653 N E 2d 888 Ill App Ct 1995 Court Listener Retrieved January 24 2021 Petition of KM 653 N E 2d 888 Ill App Ct 1995 Court Listener Retrieved January 24 2021 Same sex Indiana couple celebrates birth certificate win Same sex couples win birth certificate lawsuit Wang Stephanie January 31 2017 State appeals ruling on parental rights for same sex couples Indy Star Same sex birth certificate case stalls at 7th Circuit putting families in limbo The Indiana Lawyer April 4 2019 After 32 Month Delay 7th Circuit Affirms Equal Rights for Same Sex Parents Slate January 17 2020 Henderson v Box No 17 1141 7th Cir 2020 law justia com January 17 2020 Supreme Court hands down victory for lesbian moms December 14 2020 In re I M Kan Ct App 2012 Text Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on June 14 2019 Retrieved February 23 2013 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link ACLU Praises Appeals Court Decision on Same Sex Second Parent Adoption Press release American Civil Liberties Union December 13 2012 Archived from the original on October 17 2019 Retrieved March 4 2013 Michigan adoption ban for unmarried couples being challenged in court today The Detroit News August 29 2012 Archived from the original on July 8 2018 Retrieved September 7 2012 Ferretti Christine September 7 2012 Hazel Park women challenge Michigan s marriage amendment The Detroit News Archived from the original on October 7 2012 Retrieved September 7 2012 Le Coz Emily August 26 2011 Mississippi leads nation in same sex child rearing Northeast Mississippi Daily Journal Archived from the original on July 13 2012 Retrieved March 12 2012 Mississippi Statutes Annotated 93 17 3 5 Swayze Royce August 14 2015 Same sex couples sue over Mississippi adoption ban USA Today Archived from the original on August 18 2015 Retrieved September 14 2015 Brooks Karen August 12 2015 Suit challenges Mississippi ban on adoption by same sex couples Reuters Archived from the original on May 27 2018 Retrieved September 14 2015 http www southernequality org wp content uploads 2015 08 15 08 12 COMPLAINT pdf bare URL PDF Barbash Fred April 1 2016 Federal judge voids Mississippi ban on same sex couple adoptions The Washington Post Archived from the original on April 9 2016 Retrieved April 9 2016 O Brien Brendan August 27 2013 Couples challenge Nebraska ban on gay adoptive and foster parents Reuters Retrieved August 29 2013 Mangan Dan October 1 2012 Judge rejects birth mother amp gives custody to partner New York Post Archived from the original on February 23 2018 Retrieved October 2 2012 Hamer Emily December 1 2015 Court case deals with discrepancy in Wisconsin s laws for gay parents The Badger Herald Archived from the original on March 24 2017 Retrieved April 9 2016 Additional sources EditBall Carlos A 2012 The Right to Be Parents LGBT Families and the Transformation of Parenthood New York University Press ISBN 978 0814739303 Eilperin Juliet July 11 2013 Another front in the gay rights battle The Washington Post Archived from the original on July 12 2013 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Same sex adoption in the United States amp oldid 1177238045, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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