The adopted child (if over a certain age 14 in several states), the adoptee’s mother and the adoptee’s father or putative (presumed) father if the putative father has made efforts to be included in the putative father registry.
- What methods of adoptions are there?
- What is adoption?
- If you think you are the father of a child, but you are not married and the mother refuses to let you see the baby, is there anything you can do?
- If you are a pregnant and unmarried woman, and the father refuses to acknowledge paternity, what can you do?
- Can courts modify child support obligations?
- What happens if a person refuses to pay child support?
- How does a court determine the amount of child support?
- Can a court require a parent to pay child support?
- Can grandparents have visitation rights?
- What if one parent refuses another parent’s visitation rights?
- Can courts modify custody arrangements?
- Can a court require parents to attend counseling sessions before awarding custody?
- What is supervised visitation?
- In those states that examine the relocation of a parent under a best interests of the child analysis, what are the factors that courts consider?
- Can a parent with custody move out of state with a child without permission of the other parent?
- Can a parent have child custody if he or she has committed a crime?
- Arizona Law on Best Interests of the Child ยง 25-403
- How do courts determine custody for a child?
- What different types of child custody are there?
- What is child custody?


