Search
Latest Articles
- Raising Your Children Before, During, and After Divorce
- How to stay calm around your ex
- Some individuals in second and third marriages who consider divorce manageable
- 65 per cent of all second and third marriages end in divorce
- Adult Stepdaughter mean to me
- Stepfamily Problems
- Role of the Christian Stepfather
- The Co-Parenting Survival Guide: Letting Go of Conflict After a Difficult Divorce
- The Emotionally Abusive Relationship: How to Stop Being Abused and How to Stop Abusing
- Should I Stay or Should I Go?
- Child Custody - The Down and Dirty Divorce Guide
- Helping Your Kids Cope with Divorce the Sandcastles Way
- Clean Leather Furniture, Car Seats and Vinyl - Tips and Steps
- Child Custody – The Down and Dirty Divorce Guide
- Stepfamily Wiki: Step Parent Forum
Latest Comments
- Kids in a remarriage with chil...
I totally agree with this article. It is frustrati... - Where does the term step-paren...
When my husband and I married it was a second marr... - Dealing with a Jealous Adult S...
I have been at it for 15 years. There's no end to ... - Where does the term step-paren...
In Dutch (a germanic language,as english is also) ... - Poems for stepmothers to stepd...
I would also very much like one!!!
| Can I adopt my step-children or a child related to me? |
|
|
|
Adoption is a serious and final legal step. It is not usual to formally adopt step children or relatives. This is because parenting orders can usually be made to meet a child's needs without adoption. A child’s step-parent, that is the married or de facto spouse of a parent of the child, will be able to apply to adopt the child if:
An application relating to a child who has turned 17 years of age may be accepted if Adoption Services Queensland decides:
Under the Adoption Act 2009 (Qld), a person can no longer apply to adopt a child who is related to the person (other than a person applying to adopt a step-child). If adoption by a relative is the best option for securing a child’s long-term care, the department can ask a relative to consider being assessed as a prospective adoptive parent for the child. However, the relative cannot initiate the process. Source: Legal Aid Queensland |









Add comment