- Home
- Topics
- Services
- Constitutional law
- Submit Articles
- Lawyers
- Laws
- My Account
- Members
Tags
Categories
- Administrative Law
- Animal Laws
- Arbitration
- Army laws
- Australian Law
- Aviation Law
- Bangladesh Laws
- Banking & Finance laws
- Canada Law
- Civil Law
- Company Law
- Competition Law
- Constitutional law
- Consumer laws
- Contract Laws
- Criminal Law
- Cyber Law
- Disability Laws
- Education Law
- Elderly Law
- Election Law
- Election Laws
- Employment Law
- Environmental Law
- Family Law
- Fashion Law
- Food and Drugs
- Foreign laws
- Human Rights
- Immigration Law
- Insurance laws
- Intellectual Property
- International law
- Judge
- Judiciary
- Jurisprudence
- Juvenile Law
- Labour Law
- Land Laws
- Laws
- Legal Profession
- Lok Adalat
- Maritime Law
- Media laws
- Medico Legal
- Minority Laws
- Miscellaneous Laws
- Motor Laws
- Personal Laws
- Politics
- Property laws
- Sports Law
- Supreme Court
- Tax laws
- Technology laws
- Third Gender
- Torts Law
- Traffic Laws
- UAE Laws
- Uncategorized
- United Kingdom
- US Laws
- Woman Law
- Centre’s IT Rules Expansion To Social Media Users: A Constitutional Storm Brewing
- Judicial Appointments Crisis in India: Justice Oka Flags Threat to Judicial Independence
- The Pillars of Adverse Possession: Understanding Nec Vi, Nec Clam, Nec Precario
- Your Rights in Live-In Relationships Under Indian Law
- An Overview of Construction Disputes in the UAE
- Essential Features of the Limitation Act, 1963
- The Vanguard of Liberty: Qualities of a Great Criminal Defense Lawyer
- Global Minimum Tax (OECD Pillar Two) and its implications for India: evaluating readiness, challenges and sovereignty concerns
Author: Reetuparna
This research paper, titled “Intercountry Adoption and Child Trafficking Concerns: The Need for Stricter International Cooperation,” critically examines how intercountry adoption, originally intended as a humanitarian solution for orphaned children, has become vulnerable to systemic abuse and child trafficking. It explores the legal and institutional shortcomings of international frameworks such as the Hague Convention (1993) and the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child (1989), emphasizing the exploitation caused by falsified documentation, profit-driven intermediaries, and weak enforcement. Through analysis of global case studies, the paper identifies systemic gaps like poor data tracking, inadequate monitoring, and jurisdictional conflicts. It proposes comprehensive reforms including a Global Adoption Integrity System (GAIS), enhanced bilateral cooperation, stricter financial regulation, and survivor-centered justice mechanisms. Ultimately, the paper advocates for a transparent, ethical, and child-centered global adoption system rooted in accountability and international solidarity.
Subscribe to Updates
Get the latest Legal Updates from Legal Service India
India’s Oldest Independent Digital Legal Knowledge Platform
ISBN: 978-81-928510-0-6

