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  2. Woman's search for birth parents leads to landmark S.Korea ...

    www.aol.com/news/womans-search-birth-parents...

    Decades after she was sent for adoption in the United States, Kara Bos’ quest to find her birth parents in South Korea moved a step closer on Friday when a Seoul court ruled that a South Korean ...

  3. International adoption of South Korean children - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/International_adoption_of...

    A 2014 article in The Korea Herald said that the Korea Adoption Services was digitizing 35,000 documents regarding international adoptions that took place in South Korea since the 1950s to further the efforts of Korean adoptees locating their birth parents. [32]

  4. Deportation of Korean adoptees from the United States

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deportation_of_Korean...

    Although states still hold exclusive authority over family law within their territory, the federal government, birth countries, and international law now play a role in the process of international adoption. [3] The Child Citizenship Act of 2000 also improved the legalization process for international adoptees. This act allowed adoptees who ...

  5. Birth mothers in South Korea (international adoption) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Birth_mothers_in_South...

    The Internet represented a new opportunity for birth mothers to find community through shared experiences. In 2001, an Internet café, called A Sad Love Story of Mothers Who Sent Their Children Away for Adoption, became a popular place among birth mothers to share their stories, foster community, and process emotions. It was established by user ...

  6. Court orders South Korean agency to compensate adoptee over ...

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/court-orders-south-korean...

    A court on Tuesday ordered South Korea’s biggest adoption agency to pay 100 million won ($74,700) in damages to a 48-year-old man for mishandling his adoption as a child to the United States ...

  7. Global Overseas Adoptees' Link - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Global_Overseas_Adoptees'_Link

    The first major task of GOAL was to lobby for the inclusion of adoptees in the Overseas Koreans Act. This act was passed in 1999 and allowed adoptees residency on a F-4 visa. The visa gives every adoptee the right to reside and work in Korea for three years at a time and can be renewed. [1] GOAL was founded by Ami Nafzger in 1997.