The answer depends on the details that have not been provided. It depends on what you mean by giving up parental rights. If your grandmother was appointed as your guardian then she can petition the court to end the guardianship and consent to have you returned to your mother's custody. The circumstances that led to the need of a guardian must be resolved. If she legally adopted you then that cannot be reversed unless your grandmother consents. There are too many unknown factors to give a definitive answer.
You can not get visitation rights if you gave up your parental rights.
If a biological parent gives up their parental rights, then the spouse of the other parent is able to adopt the child. The parent who gave up their rights has no say in the matter.
its depends because if you adopted the child the mother no longer is responsible you are. but if she gave you the child with out terminating her parental rights then you have the right to sue her.
Termination of parental rights, TPR, is a long and very difficult, complex process. You need to be in touch with the child welfare agency in your area, and with an attorney. And by the way, neither parent terminates the rights of the other. It is the authority of the state that terminates parental rights.
You need to get yourself to the local family court as soon as possible and obtain a court order to establish your paternity. She cannot give up your paternal rights but you must establish yourself as the father in order to petition for custody.
Technically it is possible but you added this to the Adoption category and if that was the reason you gave the rights up, no you can not have them back. If there was another reason it depends on if the circumstances have changed and if the judge can trust you not to do it again. You need to consult a lawyer about your chances based on your specific case.
No. Custody of Michael Jackson's children went to Jackson's mother, Katherine. Ex-wife, Debbie Rowe gave up her parental rights but will have visitation.
They have a mother in the biological sense i.e. the one that gave birth to them or laid the eggs, but the mother does not provide parental care.
Once biological parental rights are terminated (TPR) and legal adoption of the child is complete, the adoptive family gains and maintains all rights to and responsibility for the child.
You lie. You say, "Your father loved you and realized he could never contribute to the family. I could not afford to feed both him and you. That is why he gave up his parental rights." You try to make the kid feel special rather than rejected.
If the father Legally gave up his parental rights - (signed legal papers), then he is no longer legally responsible to pay child support for the child. Did he give up parental rights so you could remove the child from the country? A family member of mine had to have her baby's father sign away his parental rights so he would not have to pay child support when he entered the military. So - once parental rights are signed away Legally, the father has NO obligation to pay child support. You cannot have it both ways - you cannot have him sign away his parental rights, yet still expect him to pay child support.
The dad still has full parental unless he also gave them up or lost them in court for being unfit etc.