In 2005, China had agreements with the following 16 nations for inter-country adoption:
United States,
Canada,
United Kingdom,
France,
Spain, the
Netherlands,
Belgium,
Denmark,
Norway,
Sweden,
Finland,
Iceland,
Ireland,
Australia,
New Zealand, and
Singapore. After the United States, Spain is the country that adopts the most children from China. In 2005, over 2,700 children were adopted by Spanish families. Families in Australia and Canada were also frequent adopters.
United States The United States was the number one destination for children adopted abroad, and between 2000 and 2006, U.S. residents adopted more children from China than any other country. China first allowed adoptions to the United States in 1991, when 61 children were issued immigrant visas. Between 1991 and 2005, the number of American adoptions of Chinese children increased tremendously, with a total of 62,906 children adopted by U.S. residents during that time. However, in later years, largely as a result of adoption scandals, the number of American adoptions of Chinese children declined from a high of 7,906, in 2005, to 2,587, in 2011. For years, China was deemed one of the safest countries for adoption and due to the One Child Policy there was a significant influx of abandoned children, primarily young girls in need of families. There is mounting evidence that child-trafficking rings were present in China. A notable case occurred in
Hunan province where orphanages were reported to have bought babies from traffickers with little recorded information of their provenance, before reselling them to other orphanages or families, with many being adopted internationally. ==See also==