Adoptive Couple v. Baby Girl ( 2013 )


Menu:
  • (Slip Opinion)              OCTOBER TERM, 2012                                       1
    Syllabus
    NOTE: Where it is feasible, a syllabus (headnote) will be released, as is
    being done in connection with this case, at the time the opinion is issued.
    The syllabus constitutes no part of the opinion of the Court but has been
    prepared by the Reporter of Decisions for the convenience of the reader.
    See United States v. Detroit Timber & Lumber Co., 
    200 U. S. 321
    , 337.
    SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
    Syllabus
    ADOPTIVE COUPLE v. BABY GIRL, A MINOR CHILD
    UNDER THE AGE OF FOURTEEN YEARS, ET AL.
    CERTIORARI TO THE SUPREME COURT OF SOUTH CAROLINA
    No. 12–399.      Argued April 16, 2013—Decided June 25, 2013
    The Indian Child Welfare Act of 1978 (ICWA), which establishes feder-
    al standards for state-court child custody proceedings involving Indi-
    an children, was enacted to address “the consequences . . . of abusive
    child welfare practices that [separated] Indian children from their
    families and tribes through adoption or foster care placement, usual-
    ly in non-Indian homes,” Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians v.
    Holyfield, 
    490 U. S. 30
    , 32. As relevant here, the ICWA bars involun-
    tary termination of a parent’s rights in the absence of a heightened
    showing that serious harm to the Indian child is likely to result from
    the parent’s “continued custody” of the child, 
    25 U. S. C. §1912
    (f);
    conditions involuntary termination of parental rights with respect to
    an Indian child on a showing that remedial efforts have been made to
    prevent the “breakup of the Indian family,” §1912(d); and provides
    placement preferences for the adoption of Indian children to members
    of the child’s extended family, other members of the Indian child’s
    tribe, and other Indian families, §1915(a).
    While Birth Mother was pregnant with Biological Father’s child,
    their relationship ended and Biological Father (a member of the
    Cherokee Nation) agreed to relinquish his parental rights. Birth
    Mother put Baby Girl up for adoption through a private adoption
    agency and selected Adoptive Couple, non-Indians living in South
    Carolina. For the duration of the pregnancy and the first four
    months after Baby Girl’s birth, Biological Father provided no finan-
    cial assistance to Birth Mother or Baby Girl. About four months after
    Baby Girl’s birth, Adoptive Couple served Biological Father with no-
    tice of the pending adoption. In the adoption proceedings, Biological
    Father sought custody and stated that he did not consent to the adop-
    tion. Following a trial, which took place when Baby Girl was two
    2                  ADOPTIVE COUPLE v. BABY GIRL
    Syllabus
    years old, the South Carolina Family Court denied Adoptive Couple’s
    adoption petition and awarded custody to Biological Father. At the
    age of 27 months, Baby Girl was handed over to Biological Father,
    whom she had never met. The State Supreme Court affirmed, con-
    cluding that the ICWA applied because the child custody proceeding
    related to an Indian child; that Biological Father was a “parent” un-
    der the ICWA; that §§1912(d) and (f) barred the termination of his
    parental rights; and that had his rights been terminated, §1915(a)’s
    adoption-placement preferences would have applied.
    Held:
    1. Assuming for the sake of argument that Biological Father is a
    “parent” under the ICWA, neither §1912(f) nor §1912(d) bars the
    termination of his parental rights. Pp. 6–14.
    (a) Section 1912(f) conditions the involuntary termination of pa-
    rental rights on a heightened showing regarding the merits of the
    parent’s “continued custody of the child.” The adjective “continued”
    plainly refers to a pre-existing state under ordinary dictionary defini-
    tions. The phrase “continued custody” thus refers to custody that a
    parent already has (or at least had at some point in the past). As a
    result, §1912(f) does not apply where the Indian parent never had
    custody of the Indian child. This reading comports with the statutory
    text, which demonstrates that the ICWA was designed primarily to
    counteract the unwarranted removal of Indian children from Indian
    families. See §1901(4). But the ICWA’s primary goal is not implicat-
    ed when an Indian child’s adoption is voluntarily and lawfully initi-
    ated by a non-Indian parent with sole custodial rights. Nonbinding
    guidelines issued by the Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) demonstrate
    that the BIA envisioned that §1912(f)’s standard would apply only to
    termination of a custodial parent’s rights. Under this reading, Bio-
    logical Father should not have been able to invoke §1912(f) in this
    case because he had never had legal or physical custody of Baby Girl
    as of the time of the adoption proceedings. Pp. 7–11.
    (b) Section §1912(d) conditions an involuntary termination of pa-
    rental rights with respect to an Indian child on a showing “that active
    efforts have been made to provide remedial services . . . designed to
    prevent the breakup of the Indian family and that these efforts have
    proved unsuccessful.” Consistent with this text, §1912(d) applies on-
    ly when an Indian family’s “breakup” would be precipitated by termi-
    nating parental rights. The term “breakup” refers in this context to
    “[t]he discontinuance of a relationship,” American Heritage Diction-
    ary 235 (3d ed. 1992), or “an ending as an effective entity,” Webster’s
    Third New International Dictionary 273 (1961). But when an Indian
    parent abandons an Indian child prior to birth and that child has
    never been in the Indian parent’s legal or physical custody, there is
    Cite as: 570 U. S. ____ (2013)                     3
    Syllabus
    no “relationship” to be “discontinu[ed]” and no “effective entity” to be
    “end[ed]” by terminating the Indian parent’s rights. In such a situa-
    tion, the “breakup of the Indian family” has long since occurred, and
    §1912(d) is inapplicable. This interpretation is consistent with the
    explicit congressional purpose of setting certain “standards for the
    removal of Indian children from their families,” §1902, and with BIA
    Guidelines. Section 1912(d)’s proximity to §§1912(e) and (f), which
    both condition the outcome of proceedings on the merits of an Indian
    child’s “continued custody” with his parent, strongly suggests that
    the phrase “breakup of the Indian family” should be read in harmony
    with the “continued custody” requirement. Pp. 11–14.
    2. Section 1915(a)’s adoption-placement preferences are inapplica-
    ble in cases where no alternative party has formally sought to adopt
    the child. No party other than Adoptive Couple sought to adopt Baby
    Girl in the Family Court or the South Carolina Supreme Court. Bio-
    logical Father is not covered by §1915(a) because he did not seek to
    adopt Baby Girl; instead, he argued that his parental rights should
    not be terminated in the first place. And custody was never sought
    by Baby Girl’s paternal grandparents, other members of the Chero-
    kee Nation, or other Indian families. Pp. 14–16.
    398 S. C. 625, 
    731 S. E. 2d 550
    , reversed and remanded.
    ALITO, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which ROBERTS, C. J.,
    and KENNEDY, THOMAS, and BREYER, JJ., joined. THOMAS, J., and BREY-
    ER, J., filed concurring opinions. SCALIA, J., filed a dissenting opinion.
    SOTOMAYOR, J., filed a dissenting opinion, in which GINSBURG and KA-
    GAN, JJ., joined, and in which SCALIA, J., joined in part.
    Cite as: 570 U. S. ____ (2013)                              1
    Opinion of the Court
    NOTICE: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in the
    preliminary print of the United States Reports. Readers are requested to
    notify the Reporter of Decisions, Supreme Court of the United States, Wash-
    ington, D. C. 20543, of any typographical or other formal errors, in order
    that corrections may be made before the preliminary print goes to press.
    SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
    _________________
    No. 12–399
    _________________
    ADOPTIVE COUPLE, PETITIONERS v. BABY GIRL,
    A MINOR CHILD UNDER THE AGE OF
    FOURTEEN YEARS, ET AL.
    ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI TO THE SUPREME COURT OF
    SOUTH CAROLINA
    [June 25, 2013]
    JUSTICE ALITO delivered the opinion of the Court.
    This case is about a little girl (Baby Girl) who is classi-
    fied as an Indian because she is 1.2% (3/256) Cherokee.
    Because Baby Girl is classified in this way, the South
    Carolina Supreme Court held that certain provisions of
    the federal Indian Child Welfare Act of 1978 required her
    to be taken, at the age of 27 months, from the only parents
    she had ever known and handed over to her biological
    father, who had attempted to relinquish his parental
    rights and who had no prior contact with the child. The
    provisions of the federal statute at issue here do not de-
    mand this result.
    Contrary to the State Supreme Court’s ruling, we hold
    that 
    25 U. S. C. §1912
    (f )—which bars involuntary termi-
    nation of a parent’s rights in the absence of a heightened
    showing that serious harm to the Indian child is likely to
    result from the parent’s “continued custody” of the child—
    does not apply when, as here, the relevant parent never
    had custody of the child. We further hold that §1912(d)—
    which conditions involuntary termination of parental
    2                ADOPTIVE COUPLE v. BABY GIRL
    Opinion of the Court
    rights with respect to an Indian child on a showing that
    remedial efforts have been made to prevent the “breakup
    of the Indian family”—is inapplicable when, as here, the
    parent abandoned the Indian child before birth and never
    had custody of the child. Finally, we clarify that §1915(a),
    which provides placement preferences for the adoption of
    Indian children, does not bar a non-Indian family like
    Adoptive Couple from adopting an Indian child when no
    other eligible candidates have sought to adopt the child.
    We accordingly reverse the South Carolina Supreme Court’s
    judgment and remand for further proceedings.
    I
    “The Indian Child Welfare Act of 1978 (ICWA), 
    92 Stat. 3069
    , 
    25 U. S. C. §§1901
    –1963, was the product of rising
    concern in the mid-1970’s over the consequences to In-
    dian children, Indian families, and Indian tribes of abusive
    child welfare practices that resulted in the separation of
    large numbers of Indian children from their families and
    tribes through adoption or foster care placement, usually
    in non-Indian homes.” Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indi-
    ans v. Holyfield, 
    490 U. S. 30
    , 32 (1989). Congress found
    that “an alarmingly high percentage of Indian families
    [were being] broken up by the removal, often unwarranted,
    of their children from them by nontribal public and
    private agencies.” §1901(4). This “wholesale removal of
    Indian children from their homes” prompted Congress to
    enact the ICWA, which establishes federal standards that
    govern state-court child custody proceedings involving
    Indian children. Id., at 32, 36 (internal quotation marks
    omitted); see also §1902 (declaring that the ICWA es-
    tablishes “minimum Federal standards for the removal of
    Indian children from their families”).1
    ——————
    1 It is undisputed that Baby Girl is an “Indian child” as defined by the
    ICWA because she is an unmarried minor who “is eligible for member-
    ship in an Indian tribe and is the biological child of a member of an
    Cite as: 570 U. S. ____ (2013)                    3
    Opinion of the Court
    Three provisions of the ICWA are especially relevant to
    this case. First, “[a]ny party seeking” an involuntary
    termination of parental rights to an Indian child under
    state law must demonstrate that “active efforts have
    been made to provide remedial services and rehabilitative
    programs designed to prevent the breakup of the Indian
    family and that these efforts have proved unsuccessful.”
    §1912(d). Second, a state court may not involuntarily
    terminate parental rights to an Indian child “in the ab-
    sence of a determination, supported by evidence beyond a
    reasonable doubt, including testimony of qualified expert
    witnesses, that the continued custody of the child by the
    parent or Indian custodian is likely to result in serious
    emotional or physical damage to the child.” §1912(f ).
    Third, with respect to adoptive placements for an Indian
    child under state law, “a preference shall be given, in the
    absence of good cause to the contrary, to a placement with
    (1) a member of the child’s extended family; (2) other
    members of the Indian child’s tribe; or (3) other Indian
    families.” §1915(a).
    II
    In this case, Birth Mother (who is predominantly His-
    panic) and Biological Father (who is a member of the
    Cherokee Nation) became engaged in December 2008.
    One month later, Birth Mother informed Biological Fa-
    ther, who lived about four hours away, that she was preg-
    nant. After learning of the pregnancy, Biological Father
    ——————
    Indian tribe,” §1903(4)(b). See Brief for Respondent Birth Father 1, 51,
    n. 22; Brief for Respondent Cherokee Nation 1; Brief for Petitioners 44
    (“Baby Girl’s eligibility for membership in the Cherokee Nation de-
    pends solely upon a lineal blood relationship with a tribal ancestor”).
    It is also undisputed that the present case concerns a “child custody
    proceeding,” which the ICWA defines to include proceedings that
    involve “termination of parental rights” and “adoptive placement,”
    §1903(1).
    4             ADOPTIVE COUPLE v. BABY GIRL
    Opinion of the Court
    asked Birth Mother to move up the date of the wedding.
    He also refused to provide any financial support until after
    the two had married. The couple’s relationship deteriorated,
    and Birth Mother broke off the engagement in May 2009.
    In June, Birth Mother sent Biological Father a text mes-
    sage asking if he would rather pay child support or re-
    linquish his parental rights. Biological Father responded
    via text message that he relinquished his rights.
    Birth Mother then decided to put Baby Girl up for adop-
    tion. Because Birth Mother believed that Biological Fa-
    ther had Cherokee Indian heritage, her attorney contacted
    the Cherokee Nation to determine whether Biological
    Father was formally enrolled. The inquiry letter mis-
    spelled Biological Father’s first name and incorrectly
    stated his birthday, and the Cherokee Nation responded
    that, based on the information provided, it could not verify
    Biological Father’s membership in the tribal records.
    Working through a private adoption agency, Birth
    Mother selected Adoptive Couple, non-Indians living in
    South Carolina, to adopt Baby Girl. Adoptive Couple
    supported Birth Mother both emotionally and financially
    throughout her pregnancy. Adoptive Couple was present
    at Baby Girl’s birth in Oklahoma on September 15, 2009,
    and Adoptive Father even cut the umbilical cord. The
    next morning, Birth Mother signed forms relinquishing
    her parental rights and consenting to the adoption. Adop-
    tive Couple initiated adoption proceedings in South Caro-
    lina a few days later, and returned there with Baby Girl.
    After returning to South Carolina, Adoptive Couple al-
    lowed Birth Mother to visit and communicate with Baby
    Girl.
    It is undisputed that, for the duration of the pregnancy
    and the first four months after Baby Girl’s birth, Biologi-
    cal Father provided no financial assistance to Birth Mother
    or Baby Girl, even though he had the ability to do so. In-
    deed, Biological Father “made no meaningful attempts
    Cite as: 570 U. S. ____ (2013)                 5
    Opinion of the Court
    to assume his responsibility of parenthood” during this
    period. App. to Pet. for Cert. 122a (Sealed; internal quota-
    tion marks omitted).
    Approximately four months after Baby Girl’s birth,
    Adoptive Couple served Biological Father with notice of
    the pending adoption. (This was the first notification
    that they had provided to Biological Father regarding
    the adoption proceeding.) Biological Father signed papers
    stating that he accepted service and that he was “not
    contesting the adoption.” App. 37. But Biological Father
    later testified that, at the time he signed the papers, he
    thought that he was relinquishing his rights to Birth
    Mother, not to Adoptive Couple.
    Biological Father contacted a lawyer the day after sign-
    ing the papers, and subsequently requested a stay of the
    adoption proceedings.2 In the adoption proceedings, Bio-
    logical Father sought custody and stated that he did not
    consent to Baby Girl’s adoption. Moreover, Biological
    Father took a paternity test, which verified that he was
    Baby Girl’s biological father.
    A trial took place in the South Carolina Family Court in
    September 2011, by which time Baby Girl was two years
    old. 398 S. C. 625, 634–635, 
    731 S. E. 2d 550
    , 555–556
    (2012). The Family Court concluded that Adoptive Couple
    had not carried the heightened burden under §1912(f ) of
    proving that Baby Girl would suffer serious emotional or
    physical damage if Biological Father had custody. See id.,
    at 648–651, 731 S. E. 2d, at 562–564. The Family Court
    therefore denied Adoptive Couple’s petition for adoption
    and awarded custody to Biological Father. Id., at 629,
    636, 731 S. E. 2d, at 552, 556. On December 31, 2011, at
    ——————
    2 Around  the same time, the Cherokee Nation identified Biological
    Father as a registered member and concluded that Baby Girl was an
    “Indian child” as defined in the ICWA. The Cherokee Nation inter-
    vened in the litigation approximately three months later.
    6               ADOPTIVE COUPLE v. BABY GIRL
    Opinion of the Court
    the age of 27 months, Baby Girl was handed over to Bio-
    logical Father, whom she had never met.3
    The South Carolina Supreme Court affirmed the Family
    Court’s denial of the adoption and the award of custody to
    Biological Father. Id., at 629, 731 S. E. 2d, at 552. The
    State Supreme Court first determined that the ICWA
    applied because the case involved a child custody proceed-
    ing relating to an Indian child. Id., at 637, 643, n. 18, 731
    S. E. 2d, at 556, 560, n. 18. It also concluded that Biologi-
    cal Father fell within the ICWA’s definition of a “ ‘parent.’ ”
    Id., at 644, 731 S. E. 2d, at 560. The court then held that
    two separate provisions of the ICWA barred the termina-
    tion of Biological Father’s parental rights. First, the court
    held that Adoptive Couple had not shown that “active
    efforts ha[d] been made to provide remedial services and
    rehabilitative programs designed to prevent the breakup
    of the Indian family.” §1912(d); see also id., at 647–648,
    731 S. E. 2d, at 562. Second, the court concluded that
    Adoptive Couple had not shown that Biological Father’s
    “custody of Baby Girl would result in serious emotional or
    physical harm to her beyond a reasonable doubt.” Id., at
    648–649, 731 S. E. 2d, at 562–563 (citing §1912(f )). Finally,
    the court stated that, even if it had decided to terminate
    Biological Father’s parental rights, §1915(a)’s adoption-
    placement preferences would have applied. Id., at 655–657,
    731 S. E. 2d, at 566–567. We granted certiorari. 568 U. S.
    ___ (2013).
    III
    It is undisputed that, had Baby Girl not been 3/256
    Cherokee, Biological Father would have had no right to
    ——————
    3 According to the guardian ad litem, Biological Father allowed Baby
    Girl to speak with Adoptive Couple by telephone the following day, but
    then cut off all communication between them. Moreover, according to
    Birth Mother, Biological Father has made no attempt to contact her
    since the time he took custody of Baby Girl.
    Cite as: 570 U. S. ____ (2013)                     7
    Opinion of the Court
    object to her adoption under South Carolina law. See Tr.
    of Oral Arg. 49; 398 S. C., at 644, n. 19, 731 S. E. 2d, at
    560, n. 19 (“Under state law, [Biological] Father’s con-
    sent to the adoption would not have been required”). The
    South Carolina Supreme Court held, however, that Biolog-
    ical Father is a “parent” under the ICWA and that two
    statutory provisions—namely, §1912(f ) and §1912(d)—bar
    the termination of his parental rights. In this Court,
    Adoptive Couple contends that Biological Father is not a
    “parent” and that §1912(f ) and §1912(d) are inapplicable.
    We need not—and therefore do not—decide whether Bio-
    logical Father is a “parent.” See §1903(9) (defining “par-
    ent”).4 Rather, assuming for the sake of argument that he
    is a “parent,” we hold that neither §1912(f ) nor §1912(d)
    bars the termination of his parental rights.
    A
    Section 1912(f ) addresses the involuntary termination
    of parental rights with respect to an Indian child. Specifi-
    cally, §1912(f ) provides that “[n]o termination of parental
    rights may be ordered in such proceeding in the absence of
    a determination, supported by evidence beyond a reasona-
    ble doubt, . . . that the continued custody of the child by
    the parent or Indian custodian is likely to result in serious
    emotional or physical damage to the child.” (Emphasis
    added.) The South Carolina Supreme Court held that
    Adoptive Couple failed to satisfy §1912(f ) because they did
    not make a heightened showing that Biological Father’s
    “prospective legal and physical custody” would likely result
    in serious damage to the child. 398 S. C., at 651, 731 S. E.
    2d, at 564 (emphasis added). That holding was error.
    ——————
    4 If Biological Father is not a “parent” under the ICWA, then §1912(f )
    and §1912(d)—which relate to proceedings involving possible termina-
    tion of “parental” rights—are inapplicable. Because we conclude that
    these provisions are inapplicable for other reasons, however, we need
    not decide whether Biological Father is a “parent.”
    8                ADOPTIVE COUPLE v. BABY GIRL
    Opinion of the Court
    Section 1912(f ) conditions the involuntary termination
    of parental rights on a showing regarding the merits of
    “continued custody of the child by the parent.” (Emphasis
    added.) The adjective “continued” plainly refers to a pre-
    existing state. As JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR concedes, post, at
    11 (dissenting opinion) (hereinafter the dissent), “contin-
    ued” means “[c]arried on or kept up without cessation”
    or “[e]xtended in space without interruption or breach of
    conne[ct]ion.” Compact Edition of the Oxford English
    Dictionary 909 (1981 reprint of 1971 ed.) (Compact OED);
    see also American Heritage Dictionary 288 (1981) (defin-
    ing “continue” in the following manner: “1. To go on with
    a particular action or in a particular condition; persist. . . .
    3. To remain in the same state, capacity, or place”); Web-
    ster’s Third New International Dictionary 493 (1961)
    (Webster’s) (defining “continued” as “stretching out in time
    or space esp. without interruption”); Aguilar v. FDIC, 
    63 F. 3d 1059
    , 1062 (CA11 1995) (per curiam) (suggesting
    that the phrase “continue an action” means “go on with . . .
    an action” that is “preexisting”). The term “continued”
    also can mean “resumed after interruption.” Webster’s
    493; see American Heritage Dictionary 288. The phrase
    “continued custody” therefore refers to custody that a
    parent already has (or at least had at some point in the
    past). As a result, §1912(f ) does not apply in cases where
    the Indian parent never had custody of the Indian child.5
    Biological Father’s contrary reading of §1912(f ) is non-
    sensical. Pointing to the provision’s requirement that
    ——————
    5 With
    a torrent of words, the dissent attempts to obscure the fact
    that its interpretation simply cannot be squared with the statutory
    text. A biological father’s “continued custody” of a child cannot be
    assessed if the father never had custody at all, and the use of a differ-
    ent phrase—“termination of parental rights”—cannot change that. In
    addition, the dissent’s reliance on subsection headings, post, at 9,
    overlooks the fact that those headings were not actually enacted by
    Congress. See 
    92 Stat. 3071
    –3072.
    Cite as: 570 U. S. ____ (2013)                     9
    Opinion of the Court
    “[n]o termination of parental rights may be ordered . . . in
    the absence of a determination” relating to “the continued
    custody of the child by the parent,” Biological Father
    contends that if a determination relating to “continued
    custody” is inapposite in cases where there is no “custody,”
    the statutory text prohibits termination. See Brief for
    Respondent Birth Father 39. But it would be absurd to
    think that Congress enacted a provision that permits
    termination of a custodial parent’s rights, while simulta-
    neously prohibiting termination of a noncustodial parent’s
    rights. If the statute draws any distinction between
    custodial and noncustodial parents, that distinction
    surely does not provide greater protection for noncustodial
    parents.6
    Our reading of §1912(f ) comports with the statutory text
    demonstrating that the primary mischief the ICWA was
    designed to counteract was the unwarranted removal of
    Indian children from Indian families due to the cultural
    insensitivity and biases of social workers and state courts.
    The statutory text expressly highlights the primary prob-
    lem that the statute was intended to solve: “an alarmingly
    high percentage of Indian families [were being] broken up
    by the removal, often unwarranted, of their children from
    them by nontribal public and private agencies.” §1901(4)
    (emphasis added); see also §1902 (explaining that the
    ICWA establishes “minimum Federal standards for the
    removal of Indian children from their families” (emphasis
    added)); Holyfield, 
    490 U. S., at
    32–34. And if the legisla-
    tive history of the ICWA is thought to be relevant, it fur-
    ——————
    6 The dissent criticizes us for allegedly concluding that a biological
    father qualifies for “substantive” statutory protections “only when [he]
    has physical or state-recognized legal custody.” Post, at 2, 6–7. But the
    dissent undercuts its own point when it states that “numerous” ICWA
    provisions not at issue here afford “meaningful” protections to biological
    fathers regardless of whether they ever had custody. Post, at 4–7, and
    nn. 1, 2.
    10            ADOPTIVE COUPLE v. BABY GIRL
    Opinion of the Court
    ther underscores that the Act was primarily intended to
    stem the unwarranted removal of Indian children from
    intact Indian families. See, e.g., H. R. Rep. No. 95–1386,
    p. 8 (1978) (explaining that, as relevant here, “[t]he pur-
    pose of [the ICWA] is to protect the best interests of Indian
    children and to promote the stability and security of Indian
    tribes and families by establishing minimum Federal
    standards for the removal of Indian children from their
    families and the placement of such children in foster or
    adoptive homes” (emphasis added)); id., at 9 (decrying the
    “wholesale separation of Indian children” from their Indian
    families); id., at 22 (discussing “the removal” of Indian
    children from their parents pursuant to §§1912(e) and (f )).
    In sum, when, as here, the adoption of an Indian child is
    voluntarily and lawfully initiated by a non-Indian parent
    with sole custodial rights, the ICWA’s primary goal of
    preventing the unwarranted removal of Indian children
    and the dissolution of Indian families is not implicated.
    The dissent fails to dispute that nonbinding guidelines
    issued by the Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) shortly after
    the ICWA’s enactment demonstrate that the BIA envi-
    sioned that §1912(f )’s standard would apply only to termi-
    nation of a custodial parent’s rights. Specifically, the BIA
    stated that, under §1912(f ), “[a] child may not be removed
    simply because there is someone else willing to raise the
    child who is likely to do a better job”; instead, “[i]t must
    be shown that . . . it is dangerous for the child to remain
    with his or her present custodians.” Guidelines for State
    Courts; Indian Child Custody Proceedings, 
    44 Fed. Reg. 67593
     (1979) (emphasis added) (hereinafter Guidelines).
    Indeed, the Guidelines recognized that §1912(f ) applies
    only when there is pre-existing custody to evaluate. See
    ibid. (“[T]he issue on which qualified expert testimony is
    required is the question of whether or not serious damage
    to the child is likely to occur if the child is not removed”).
    Under our reading of §1912(f ), Biological Father should
    Cite as: 570 U. S. ____ (2013)                  11
    Opinion of the Court
    not have been able to invoke §1912(f ) in this case, because
    he had never had legal or physical custody of Baby Girl as
    of the time of the adoption proceedings. As an initial
    matter, it is undisputed that Biological Father never had
    physical custody of Baby Girl. And as a matter of both
    South Carolina and Oklahoma law, Biological Father
    never had legal custody either. See S. C. Code Ann. §63–
    17–20(B) (2010) (“Unless the court orders otherwise, the
    custody of an illegitimate child is solely in the natural
    mother unless the mother has relinquished her rights to
    the child”); Okla. Stat., Tit. 10, §7800 (West Cum. Supp.
    2013) (“Except as otherwise provided by law, the mother
    of a child born out of wedlock has custody of the child
    until determined otherwise by a court of competent
    jurisdiction”).7
    In sum, the South Carolina Supreme Court erred in
    finding that §1912(f ) barred termination of Biological
    Father’s parental rights.
    B
    Section 1912(d) provides that “[a]ny party” seeking to
    terminate parental rights to an Indian child under state
    law “shall satisfy the court that active efforts have been
    made to provide remedial services and rehabilitative
    programs designed to prevent the breakup of the Indian
    ——————
    7 In an effort to rebut our supposed conclusion that “Congress could
    not possibly have intended” to require legal termination of Biological
    Father’s rights with respect to Baby Girl, the dissent asserts that a
    minority of States afford (or used to afford) protection to similarly
    situated biological fathers. See post, at 17–18, and n. 12 (emphasis
    added). This is entirely beside the point, because we merely conclude
    that, based on the statute’s text and structure, Congress did not extend
    the heightened protections of §1912(d) and §1912(f ) to all biological
    fathers. The fact that state laws may provide certain protections to
    biological fathers who have abandoned their children and who have
    never had custody of their children in no way undermines our analysis
    of these two federal statutory provisions.
    12            ADOPTIVE COUPLE v. BABY GIRL
    Opinion of the Court
    family and that these efforts have proved unsuccessful.”
    (Emphasis added.) The South Carolina Supreme Court
    found that Biological Father’s parental rights could not
    be terminated because Adoptive Couple had not demon-
    strated that Biological Father had been provided remedial
    services in accordance with §1912(d). 398 S. C., at 647–
    648, 731 S. E. 2d, at 562. We disagree.
    Consistent with the statutory text, we hold that
    §1912(d) applies only in cases where an Indian family’s
    “breakup” would be precipitated by the termination of the
    parent’s rights. The term “breakup” refers in this context
    to “[t]he discontinuance of a relationship,” American Her-
    itage Dictionary 235 (3d ed. 1992), or “an ending as an
    effective entity,” Webster’s 273 (defining “breakup” as “a
    disruption or dissolution into component parts: an ending
    as an effective entity”). See also Compact OED 1076
    (defining “break-up” as, inter alia, a “disruption, separa-
    tion into parts, disintegration”). But when an Indian
    parent abandons an Indian child prior to birth and that
    child has never been in the Indian parent’s legal or
    physical custody, there is no “relationship” that would be
    “discontinu[ed]”—and no “effective entity” that would
    be “end[ed]”—by the termination of the Indian par-
    ent’s rights. In such a situation, the “breakup of the
    Indian family” has long since occurred, and §1912(d) is
    inapplicable.
    Our interpretation of §1912(d) is, like our interpretation
    of §1912(f ), consistent with the explicit congressional
    purpose of providing certain “standards for the removal of
    Indian children from their families.” §1902 (emphasis
    added); see also, e.g., §1901(4); Holyfield, 
    490 U. S., at
    32–
    34. In addition, the BIA’s Guidelines confirm that reme-
    dial services under §1912(d) are intended “to alleviate the
    need to remove the Indian child from his or her parents or
    Indian custodians,” not to facilitate a transfer of the child
    to an Indian parent. See 44 Fed. Reg., at 67592 (emphasis
    Cite as: 570 U. S. ____ (2013)                    13
    Opinion of the Court
    added).
    Our interpretation of §1912(d) is also confirmed by the
    provision’s placement next to §1912(e) and §1912(f ), both
    of which condition the outcome of proceedings on the
    merits of an Indian child’s “continued custody” with his
    parent. That these three provisions appear adjacent to
    each other strongly suggests that the phrase “breakup of
    the Indian family” should be read in harmony with the
    “continued custody” requirement. See United Sav. Assn.
    of Tex. v. Timbers of Inwood Forest Associates, Ltd., 
    484 U. S. 365
    , 371 (1988) (explaining that statutory construc-
    tion “is a holistic endeavor” and that “[a] provision that
    may seem ambiguous in isolation is often clarified by the
    remainder of the statutory scheme”). None of these three
    provisions creates parental rights for unwed fathers where
    no such rights would otherwise exist. Instead, Indian
    parents who are already part of an “Indian family” are
    provided with access to “remedial services and rehabilita-
    tive programs” under §1912(d) so that their “custody”
    might be “continued” in a way that avoids foster-care
    placement under §1912(e) or termination of parental
    rights under §1912(f ). In other words, the provision of
    “remedial services and rehabilitative programs” under
    §1912(d) supports the “continued custody” that is protected
    by §1912(e) and §1912(f ).8
    ——————
    8 The dissent claims that our reasoning “necessarily extends to all
    Indian parents who have never had custody of their children,” even if
    those parents have visitation rights. Post, at 2–3, 13–14. As an initial
    matter, the dissent’s concern about the effect of our decision on individ-
    uals with visitation rights will be implicated, at most, in a relatively
    small class of cases. For example, our interpretation of §1912(d) would
    implicate the dissent’s concern only in the case of a parent who aban-
    doned his or her child prior to birth and never had physical or legal
    custody, but did have some sort of visitation rights. Moreover, in cases
    where this concern is implicated, such parents might receive “compara-
    ble” protections under state law. See post, at 15. And in any event, it is
    the dissent’s interpretation that would have far-reaching consequences:
    14               ADOPTIVE COUPLE v. BABY GIRL
    Opinion of the Court
    Section 1912(d) is a sensible requirement when applied
    to state social workers who might otherwise be too quick
    to remove Indian children from their Indian families. It
    would, however, be unusual to apply §1912(d) in the con-
    text of an Indian parent who abandoned a child prior to
    birth and who never had custody of the child. The decision
    below illustrates this point. The South Carolina Supreme
    Court held that §1912(d) mandated measures such as
    “attempting to stimulate [Biological] Father’s desire to be
    a parent.” 398 S. C., at 647, 731 S. E. 2d, at 562. But if
    prospective adoptive parents were required to engage in
    the bizarre undertaking of “stimulat[ing]” a biological
    father’s “desire to be a parent,” it would surely dissuade
    some of them from seeking to adopt Indian children.9 And
    this would, in turn, unnecessarily place vulnerable Indian
    children at a unique disadvantage in finding a permanent
    and loving home, even in cases where neither an Indian
    parent nor the relevant tribe objects to the adoption.10
    In sum, the South Carolina Supreme Court erred in
    finding that §1912(d) barred termination of Biological
    Father’s parental rights.
    IV
    In the decision below, the South Carolina Supreme
    ——————
    Under the dissent’s reading, any biological parent—even a sperm
    donor—would enjoy the heightened protections of §1912(d) and
    §1912(f ), even if he abandoned the mother and the child immediately
    after conception. Post, at 14, n. 8.
    9 Biological Father and the Solicitor General argue that a tribe
    or state agency could provide the requisite remedial services under
    §1912(d). Brief for Respondent Birth Father 43; Brief for United States
    as Amicus Curiae 22. But what if they don’t? And if they don’t, would
    the adoptive parents have to undertake the task?
    10 The dissent repeatedly mischaracterizes our opinion. As our de-
    tailed discussion of the terms of the ICWA makes clear, our decision
    is not based on a “[p]olicy disagreement with Congress’ judgment.” Post,
    at 2; see also post, at 8, 21.
    Cite as: 570 U. S. ____ (2013)                    15
    Opinion of the Court
    Court suggested that if it had terminated Biological Fa-
    ther’s rights, then §1915(a)’s preferences for the adoptive
    placement of an Indian child would have been applicable.
    398 S. C., at 655–657, 731 S. E. 2d, at 566–567. In so
    doing, however, the court failed to recognize a critical lim-
    itation on the scope of §1915(a).
    Section 1915(a) provides that “[i]n any adoptive place-
    ment of an Indian child under State law, a preference
    shall be given, in the absence of good cause to the contrary,
    to a placement with (1) a member of the child’s extended
    family; (2) other members of the Indian child’s tribe; or
    (3) other Indian families.” Contrary to the South Carolina
    Supreme Court’s suggestion, §1915(a)’s preferences are
    inapplicable in cases where no alternative party has for-
    mally sought to adopt the child. This is because there
    simply is no “preference” to apply if no alternative party
    that is eligible to be preferred under §1915(a) has come
    forward.
    In this case, Adoptive Couple was the only party that
    sought to adopt Baby Girl in the Family Court or the
    South Carolina Supreme Court. See Brief for Petitioners
    19, 55; Brief for Respondent Birth Father 48; Reply Brief
    for Petitioners 13. Biological Father is not covered by
    §1915(a) because he did not seek to adopt Baby Girl; in-
    stead, he argued that his parental rights should not be
    terminated in the first place.11 Moreover, Baby Girl’s
    ——————
    11 Section 1915(c) also provides that, in the case of an adoptive place-
    ment under §1915(a), “if the Indian child’s tribe shall establish a
    different order of preference by resolution, the agency or court effecting
    the placement shall follow such order so long as the placement is the
    least restrictive setting appropriate to the particular needs of the child,
    as provided in [§1915(b)].” Although we need not decide the issue
    here, it may be the case that an Indian child’s tribe could alter §1915’s
    preferences in a way that includes a biological father whose rights were
    terminated, but who has now reformed. See §1915(c). If a tribe were to
    take such an approach, however, the court would still have the power to
    determine whether “good cause” exists to disregard the tribe’s order of
    16               ADOPTIVE COUPLE v. BABY GIRL
    Opinion of the Court
    paternal grandparents never sought custody of Baby Girl.
    See Brief for Petitioners 55; Reply Brief for Petitioners 13;
    398 S. C., at 699, 731 S. E. 2d, at 590 (Kittredge, J., dis-
    senting) (noting that the “paternal grandparents are not
    parties to this action”). Nor did other members of the
    Cherokee Nation or “other Indian families” seek to adopt
    Baby Girl, even though the Cherokee Nation had notice
    of—and intervened in—the adoption proceedings. See
    Brief for Respondent Cherokee Nation 21–22; Reply Brief
    for Petitioners 13–14.12
    *     *     *
    The Indian Child Welfare Act was enacted to help pre-
    serve the cultural identity and heritage of Indian tribes,
    but under the State Supreme Court’s reading, the Act
    would put certain vulnerable children at a great disad-
    vantage solely because an ancestor—even a remote one—
    was an Indian.        As the State Supreme Court read
    §§1912(d) and (f ), a biological Indian father could abandon
    his child in utero and refuse any support for the birth
    mother—perhaps contributing to the mother’s decision to
    put the child up for adoption—and then could play his
    ICWA trump card at the eleventh hour to override the
    mother’s decision and the child’s best interests. If this
    were possible, many prospective adoptive parents would
    surely pause before adopting any child who might possibly
    qualify as an Indian under the ICWA. Such an interpreta-
    ——————
    preference. See §§1915(a), (c); In re Adoption of T. R. M., 
    525 N. E. 2d 298
    , 313 (Ind. 1988).
    12 To be sure, an employee of the Cherokee Nation testified that the
    Cherokee Nation certifies families to be adoptive parents and that
    there are approximately 100 such families “that are ready to take
    children that want to be adopted.” Record 446. However, this testi-
    mony was only a general statement regarding the Cherokee Nation’s
    practices; it did not demonstrate that a specific Indian family was
    willing to adopt Baby Girl, let alone that such a family formally sought
    such adoption in the South Carolina courts. See Reply Brief for Peti-
    tioners 13–14; see also Brief for Respondent Cherokee Nation 21–22.
    Cite as: 570 U. S. ____ (2013)           17
    Opinion of the Court
    tion would raise equal protection concerns, but the plain
    text of §§1912(f ) and (d) makes clear that neither provision
    applies in the present context. Nor do §1915(a)’s rebutta-
    ble adoption preferences apply when no alternative party
    has formally sought to adopt the child. We therefore
    reverse the judgment of the South Carolina Supreme
    Court and remand the case for further proceedings not
    inconsistent with this opinion.
    It is so ordered.
    Cite as: 570 U. S. ____ (2013)           1
    THOMAS, J., concurring
    SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
    _________________
    No. 12–399
    _________________
    ADOPTIVE COUPLE, PETITIONERS v. BABY GIRL,
    A MINOR CHILD UNDER THE AGE OF
    FOURTEEN YEARS, ET AL.
    ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI TO THE SUPREME COURT OF
    SOUTH CAROLINA
    [June 25, 2013]
    JUSTICE THOMAS, concurring.
    I join the Court’s opinion in full but write separately
    to explain why constitutional avoidance compels this out-
    come. Each party in this case has put forward a plausible
    interpretation of the relevant sections of the Indian Child
    Welfare Act (ICWA). However, the interpretations offered
    by respondent Birth Father and the United States raise
    significant constitutional problems as applied to this
    case. Because the Court’s decision avoids those problems,
    I concur in its interpretation.
    I
    This case arises out of a contested state-court adoption
    proceeding. Adoption proceedings are adjudicated in state
    family courts across the country every day, and “domestic
    relations” is “an area that has long been regarded as a
    virtually exclusive province of the States.” Sosna v. Iowa,
    
    419 U. S. 393
    , 404 (1975). Indeed, “[t]he whole subject of
    the domestic relations of husband and wife, parent and
    child, belongs to the laws of the States and not to the laws
    of the United States.” In re Burrus, 
    136 U. S. 586
    , 593–
    594 (1890). Nevertheless, when Adoptive Couple filed a
    petition in South Carolina Family Court to finalize their
    adoption of Baby Girl, Birth Father, who had relinquished
    2             ADOPTIVE COUPLE v. BABY GIRL
    THOMAS, J., concurring
    his parental rights via a text message to Birth Mother,
    claimed a federal right under the ICWA to block the adop-
    tion and to obtain custody.
    The ICWA establishes “federal standards that govern
    state-court child custody proceedings involving Indian
    children.” Ante, at 2. The ICWA defines “Indian child” as
    “any unmarried person who is under age eighteen and is
    either (a) a member of an Indian tribe or (b) is eligible
    for membership in an Indian tribe and is the biological
    child of a member of an Indian tribe.” 
    25 U. S. C. §1903
    (4).
    As relevant, the ICWA defines “child custody proceeding,”
    §1903(1), to include “adoptive placement,” which means
    “the permanent placement of an Indian child for adoption,
    including any action resulting in a final decree of adop-
    tion,” §1903(1)(iv), and “termination of parental rights,”
    which means “any action resulting in the termination of
    the parent-child relationship,” §1903(1)(ii).
    The ICWA restricts a state court’s ability to terminate
    the parental rights of an Indian parent in two relevant
    ways. Section 1912(f) prohibits a state court from involun-
    tarily terminating parental rights “in the absence of a
    determination, supported by evidence beyond a reasonable
    doubt, including testimony of qualified expert witnesses,
    that the continued custody of the child by the parent or
    Indian custodian is likely to result in serious emotional or
    physical damage to the child.” Section 1912(d) prohibits a
    state court from terminating parental rights until the
    court is satisfied “that active efforts have been made to
    provide remedial services and rehabilitative programs
    designed to prevent the breakup of the Indian family and
    that these efforts have proved unsuccessful.” A third
    provision creates specific placement preferences for the
    adoption of Indian children, which favor placement with
    Indians over other adoptive families. §1915(a). Operating
    together, these requirements often lead to different out-
    comes than would result under state law. That is precisely
    Cite as: 570 U. S. ____ (2013)            3
    THOMAS, J., concurring
    what happened here. See ante, at 6 (“It is undisputed
    that, had Baby Girl not been 3/256 Cherokee, Biological
    Father would have had no right to object to her adoption
    under South Carolina law”).
    The ICWA recognizes States’ inherent “jurisdiction over
    Indian child custody proceedings,” §1901(5), but asserts
    that federal regulation is necessary because States “have
    often failed to recognize the essential tribal relations of
    Indian people and the cultural and social standards pre-
    vailing in Indian communities and families,” ibid. However,
    Congress may regulate areas of traditional state concern
    only if the Constitution grants it such power. Admt. 10
    (“The powers not delegated to the United States by the
    Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are re-
    served to the States respectively, or to the people”). The
    threshold question, then, is whether the Constitution
    grants Congress power to override state custody law
    whenever an Indian is involved.
    II
    The ICWA asserts that the Indian Commerce Clause,
    Art. I, §8, cl. 3, and “other constitutional authority” pro-
    vides Congress with “plenary power over Indian affairs.”
    §1901(1). The reference to “other constitutional authority”
    is not illuminating, and I am aware of no other enumer-
    ated power that could even arguably support Congress’
    intrusion into this area of traditional state authority. See
    Fletcher, The Supreme Court and Federal Indian Policy,
    
    85 Neb. L. Rev. 121
    , 137 (2006) (“As a matter of federal
    constitutional law, the Indian Commerce Clause grants
    Congress the only explicit constitutional authority to deal
    with Indian tribes”); Natelson, The Original Understand-
    ing of the Indian Commerce Clause, 85 Denver U. L. Rev.
    201, 210 (2007) (hereinafter Natelson) (evaluating, and
    rejecting, other potential sources of authority supporting
    congressional power over Indians). The assertion of ple-
    4             ADOPTIVE COUPLE v. BABY GIRL
    THOMAS, J., concurring
    nary authority must, therefore, stand or fall on Congress’
    power under the Indian Commerce Clause. Although this
    Court has said that the “central function of the Indian
    Commerce Clause is to provide Congress with plenary
    power to legislate in the field of Indian affairs,” Cotton
    Petroleum Corp. v. New Mexico, 
    490 U. S. 163
    , 192 (1989),
    neither the text nor the original understanding of the
    Clause supports Congress’ claim to such “plenary” power.
    A
    The Indian Commerce Clause gives Congress authority
    “[t]o regulate Commerce . . . with the Indian tribes.”
    Art. I, §8, cl. 3 (emphasis added). “At the time the original
    Constitution was ratified, ‘commerce’ consisted of selling,
    buying, and bartering, as well as transporting for these
    purposes.” United States v. Lopez, 
    514 U. S. 549
    , 585
    (1995) (THOMAS, J., concurring). See also 1 S. Johnson, A
    Dictionary of the English Language 361 (4th rev. ed. 1773)
    (reprint 1978) (defining commerce as “Intercourse; ex-
    change of one thing for another; interchange of any thing;
    trade; traffick”). “[W]hen Federalists and Anti-Federalists
    discussed the Commerce Clause during the ratification
    period, they often used trade (in its selling/bartering
    sense) and commerce interchangeably.” Lopez, supra, at
    586 (THOMAS, J., concurring). The term “commerce” did
    not include economic activity such as “manufacturing and
    agriculture,” ibid., let alone noneconomic activity such as
    adoption of children.
    Furthermore, the term “commerce with Indian tribes”
    was invariably used during the time of the founding to
    mean “ ‘trade with Indians.’ ” See, e.g., Natelson, 215–216,
    and n. 97 (citing 18th-century sources); Report of Commit-
    tee on Indian Affairs (Feb 20, 1787), in 32 Journals of the
    Continental Congress 1774–1789, pp. 66, 68 (R. Hill ed.
    1936) (hereinafter J. Cont’l Cong.) (using the phrase
    “commerce with the Indians” to mean trade with the
    Cite as: 570 U. S. ____ (2013)            5
    THOMAS, J., concurring
    Indians). And regulation of Indian commerce generally
    referred to legal structures governing “the conduct of
    the merchants engaged in the Indian trade, the nature of the
    goods they sold, the prices charged, and similar matters.”
    Natelson 216, and n. 99.
    The Indian Commerce Clause contains an additional
    textual limitation relevant to this case: Congress is given
    the power to regulate Commerce “with the Indian tribes.”
    The Clause does not give Congress the power to regulate
    commerce with all Indian persons any more than the
    Foreign Commerce Clause gives Congress the power to
    regulate commerce with all foreign nationals traveling
    within the United States. A straightforward reading of
    the text, thus, confirms that Congress may only regulate
    commercial interactions—“commerce”—taking place with
    established Indian communities—“tribes.” That power is
    far from “plenary.”
    B
    Congress’ assertion of “plenary power” over Indian
    affairs is also inconsistent with the history of the Indian
    Commerce Clause. At the time of the founding, the Clause
    was understood to reserve to the States general police
    powers with respect to Indians who were citizens of the
    several States. The Clause instead conferred on Congress
    the much narrower power to regulate trade with Indian
    tribes—that is, Indians who had not been incorporated
    into the body-politic of any State.
    1
    Before the Revolution, most Colonies adopted their own
    regulations governing Indian trade. See Natelson 219,
    and n. 121 (citing colonial laws). Such regulations were
    necessary because colonial traders all too often abused
    their Indian trading partners, through fraud, exorbitant
    prices, extortion, and physical invasion of Indian territory,
    6                 ADOPTIVE COUPLE v. BABY GIRL
    THOMAS, J., concurring
    among other things. See 1 F. Prucha, The Great Father
    18–20 (1984) (hereinafter Prucha); Natelson 220, and
    n. 122. These abuses sometimes provoked violent Indian
    retaliation. See Prucha 20. To mitigate these conflicts,
    most Colonies extensively regulated traders engaged in
    commerce with Indian tribes. See e.g., Ordinance to Regu-
    late Indian Affairs, Statutes of South Carolina (Aug. 31,
    1751), in 16 Early American Indian Documents: Treaties
    and Laws, 1607–1789, pp. 331–334 (A. Vaughan and
    D. Rosen eds. 1998).1 Over time, commercial regulation at
    the colonial level proved largely ineffective, in part be-
    cause “[t]here was no uniformity among the colonies, no
    two sets of like regulations.” Prucha 21.
    Recognizing the need for uniform regulation of trade
    with the Indians, Benjamin Franklin proposed his own
    “articles of confederation” to the Continental Congress on
    July 21, 1775, which reflected his view that central control
    over Indian affairs should predominate over local control.
    2 J. Cont’l Cong. 195–199 (W. Ford ed. 1905). Franklin’s
    proposal was not enacted, but in November 1775, Con-
    gress empowered a committee to draft regulations for
    the Indian trade. 3 id., at 364, 366. On July 12, 1776, the
    committee submitted a draft of the Articles of Confedera-
    tion to Congress, which incorporated many of Franklin’s
    proposals. 5 id., at 545, 546, n. 1. The draft prohibited
    States from waging offensive war against the Indians
    without congressional authorization and granted Congress
    ——————
    1 South Carolina, for example, required traders to be licensed, to be of
    good moral character, and to post a bond. Ordinance to Regulate
    Indian Affairs, in 16 Early American Indian Documents, at 331–334. A
    potential applicant’s name was posted publicly before issuing the
    license, so anyone with objections had an opportunity to raise them.
    Id., at 332. Restrictions were placed on employing agents, id., at 333–
    334, and names of potential agents had to be disclosed. Id., at 333.
    Traders who violated these rules were subject to substantial penalties.
    Id., at 331, 334.
    Cite as: 570 U. S. ____ (2013)                   7
    THOMAS, J., concurring
    the exclusive power to acquire land from the Indians out-
    side state boundaries, once those boundaries had been es-
    tablished. Id., at 549. This version also gave Congress
    “the sole and exclusive Right and Power of . . . Regulating
    the Trade, and managing all Affairs with the Indians.” Id.
    at 550.
    On August 20, 1776, the Committee of the Whole pre-
    sented to Congress a revised draft, which provided Con-
    gress with “the sole and exclusive right and power of . . .
    regulating the trade, and managing all affairs with the
    Indians.” Id., at 672, 681–682. Some delegates feared
    that the Articles gave Congress excessive power to in-
    terfere with States’ jurisdiction over affairs with Indians
    residing within state boundaries. After further delibera-
    tion, the final result was a clause that included a broad
    grant of congressional authority with two significant
    exceptions: “The United States in Congress assembled
    shall also have the sole and exclusive right and power of
    . . . regulating the trade and managing all affairs with the
    Indians, not members of any of the States, provided that
    the legislative right of any State within its own limits be
    not infringed or violated.” Articles of Confederation, Art.
    IX, cl. 4. As a result, Congress retained exclusive jurisdic-
    tion over Indian affairs outside the borders of the States;
    the States retained exclusive jurisdiction over relations
    with Member-Indians;2 and Congress and the States “ex-
    ercise[d] concurrent jurisdiction over transactions with
    tribal Indians within state boundaries, but congressional
    decisions would have to be in compliance with local law.”
    Natelson 230. The drafting of the Articles of Confedera-
    ——————
    2 Although Indians were generally considered “members” of a State if
    they paid taxes or were citizens, see Natelson 230, the precise defini-
    tion of the term was “not yet settled” at the time of the founding
    and was “a question of frequent perplexity and contention in the fed-
    eral councils,” The Federalist No. 42, p. 265 (C. Rossiter ed. 1961) (J.
    Madison).
    8             ADOPTIVE COUPLE v. BABY GIRL
    THOMAS, J., concurring
    tion reveals the delegates’ concern with protecting the
    power of the States to regulate Indian persons who were
    politically incorporated into the States. This concern
    for state power reemerged during the drafting of the
    Constitution.
    2
    The drafting history of the Constitutional Convention
    also supports a limited construction of the Indian Com-
    merce Clause. On July 24, 1787, the convention elected
    a drafting committee—the Committee of Detail—and
    charged it to “report a Constitution conformable to the Res-
    olutions passed by the Convention.” 2 Records of the
    Federal Convention of 1787, p.106 (M. Farrand rev. 1966)
    (J. Madison). During the Committee’s deliberations, John
    Rutledge, the chairman, suggested incorporating an In-
    dian affairs power into the Constitution. Id., at 137, n. 6,
    143. The first draft reported back to the convention,
    however, provided Congress with authority “[t]o regulate
    commerce with foreign nations, and among the several
    States,” id., at 181 (Madison) (Aug. 6, 1787), but did not
    include any specific Indian affairs clause. On August 18,
    James Madison proposed that the Federal Government be
    granted several additional powers, including the power
    “[t]o regulate affairs with the Indians as well within as
    without the limits of the U. States.” Id., at 324 (J. Madi-
    son) (emphasis added). On August 22, Rutledge delivered
    the Committee of Detail’s second report, which modified
    Madison’s proposed clause. The Committee proposed to
    add to Congress’ power “[t]o regulate commerce with
    foreign nations, and among the several States” the words,
    “and with Indians, within the Limits of any State, not
    subject to the laws thereof.” Id., at 366–367 (Journal).
    The Committee’s version, which echoed the Articles of
    Confederation, was far narrower than Madison’s proposal.
    On August 31, the revised draft was submitted to a Com-
    Cite as: 570 U. S. ____ (2013)           9
    THOMAS, J., concurring
    mittee of Eleven for further action. Id., at 473 (Journal),
    481 (J. Madison). That Committee recommended adding
    to the Commerce Clause the phrase, “and with the Indian
    tribes,” id., at 493, which the Convention ultimately
    adopted.
    It is, thus, clear that the Framers of the Constitution
    were alert to the difference between the power to regulate
    trade with the Indians and the power to regulate all In-
    dian affairs. By limiting Congress’ power to the former, the
    Framers declined to grant Congress the same broad pow-
    ers over Indian affairs conferred by the Articles of Confed-
    eration. See Prakash, Against Tribal Fungibility, 
    89 Cornell L. Rev. 1069
    , 1090 (2004).
    During the ratification debates, opposition to the Indian
    Commerce Clause was nearly nonexistent. See Natelson
    248 (noting that Robert Yates, a New York Anti-Federalist
    was “almost the only writer who objected to any part [of ]
    of the Commerce Clause—a clear indication that its scope
    was understood to be fairly narrow” (footnote omitted)).
    Given the Anti-Federalists’ vehement opposition to the
    Constitution’s other grants of power to the Federal Gov-
    ernment, this silence is revealing. The ratifiers almost
    certainly understood the Clause to confer a relatively
    modest power on Congress—namely, the power to regulate
    trade with Indian tribes living beyond state borders. And
    this feature of the Constitution was welcomed by Federal-
    ists and Anti-Federalists alike due to the considerable
    interest in expanding trade with such Indian tribes. See,
    e.g., The Federalist No. 42, at 265 (J. Madison) (praising
    the Constitution for removing the obstacles that had
    existed under the Articles of Confederation to federal
    control over “trade with Indians” (emphasis added)); 3 J.
    Elliot, The Debates in the Several State Conventions on
    the Adoption of the Federal Constitution 580 (2d ed. 1863)
    (Adam Stephens, at the Virginia ratifying convention,
    June 23, 1788, describing the Indian tribes residing near
    10            ADOPTIVE COUPLE v. BABY GIRL
    THOMAS, J., concurring
    the Mississippi and “the variety of articles which might be
    obtained to advantage by trading with these people”); The
    Federalist No. 24, at 158 (A. Hamilton) (arguing that
    frontier garrisons would “be keys to the trade with the
    Indian nations”); Brutus, (Letter) X, N. Y. J., Jan. 24,
    1788, in 15 The Documentary History of the Ratification of
    the Constitution 462, 465 (J. Kaminski & G. Saladino eds.
    2012) (conceding that there must be a standing army for
    some purposes, including “trade with Indians”). There is
    little evidence that the ratifiers of the Constitution under-
    stood the Indian Commerce Clause to confer anything
    resembling plenary power over Indian affairs. See Natel-
    son 247–250.
    III
    In light of the original understanding of the Indian
    Commerce Clause, the constitutional problems that would
    be created by application of the ICWA here are evident.
    First, the statute deals with “child custody proceedings,”
    §1903(1), not “commerce.” It was enacted in response to
    concerns that “an alarmingly high percentage of Indian
    families [were] broken up by the removal, often unwar-
    ranted, of their children from them by nontribal public
    and private agencies.” §1901(4). The perceived problem
    was that many Indian children were “placed in non-Indian
    foster and adoptive homes and institutions.” Ibid. This
    problem, however, had nothing to do with commerce.
    Second, the portions of the ICWA at issue here do not
    regulate Indian tribes as tribes. Sections 1912(d) and (f ),
    and §1915(a) apply to all child custody proceedings involv-
    ing an Indian child, regardless of whether an Indian tribe
    is involved. This case thus does not directly implicate
    Congress’ power to “legislate in respect to Indian tribes.”
    United States v. Lara, 
    541 U. S. 193
    , 200 (2004) (emphasis
    added). Baby Girl was never domiciled on an Indian
    Reservation, and the Cherokee Nation had no jurisdiction
    Cite as: 570 U. S. ____ (2013)                  11
    THOMAS, J., concurring
    over her. Cf. Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians v.
    Holyfield, 
    490 U. S. 30
    , 53–54 (1989) (holding that the
    Indian Tribe had exclusive jurisdiction over child custody
    proceedings, even though the children were born off the
    reservation, because the children were “domiciled” on the
    reservation for purposes of the ICWA). Although Birth
    Father is a registered member of The Cherokee Nation, he
    did not live on a reservation either. He was, thus, subject
    to the laws of the State in which he resided (Oklahoma)
    and of the State where his daughter resided during the
    custody proceedings (South Carolina). Nothing in the In-
    dian Commerce Clause permits Congress to enact spe-
    cial laws applicable to Birth Father merely because of his
    status as an Indian.3
    Because adoption proceedings like this one involve
    neither “commerce” nor “Indian tribes,” there is simply no
    constitutional basis for Congress’ assertion of authority
    over such proceedings. Also, the notion that Congress can
    direct state courts to apply different rules of evidence and
    procedure merely because a person of Indian descent is
    involved raises absurd possibilities. Such plenary power
    would allow Congress to dictate specific rules of criminal
    procedure for state-court prosecutions against Indian
    defendants. Likewise, it would allow Congress to substi-
    tute federal law for state law when contract disputes
    involve Indians. But the Constitution does not grant
    Congress power to override state law whenever that law
    ——————
    3 Petitioners and the guardian ad litem contend that applying the
    ICWA to child custody proceedings on the basis of race implicates equal
    protection concerns. See Brief for Petitioners 45 (arguing that the
    statute would be unconstitutional “if unwed fathers with no preexisting
    substantive parental rights receive a statutory preference based solely
    on the Indian child’s race”); Brief for Respondent Guardian Ad Litem
    48–49 (same). I need not address this argument because I am satisfied
    that Congress lacks authority to regulate the child custody proceedings
    in this case.
    12            ADOPTIVE COUPLE v. BABY GIRL
    THOMAS, J., concurring
    happens to be applied to Indians. Accordingly, application
    of the ICWA to these child custody proceedings would be
    unconstitutional.
    *   *   *
    Because the Court’s plausible interpretation of the
    relevant sections of the ICWA avoids these constitutional
    problems, I concur.
    Cite as: 570 U. S. ____ (2013)            1
    BREYER, J., concurring
    SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
    _________________
    No. 12–399
    _________________
    ADOPTIVE COUPLE, PETITIONERS v. BABY GIRL,
    A MINOR CHILD UNDER THE AGE OF
    FOURTEEN YEARS, ET AL.
    ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI TO THE SUPREME COURT OF
    SOUTH CAROLINA
    [June 25, 2013]
    JUSTICE BREYER, concurring.
    I join the Court’s opinion with three observations. First,
    the statute does not directly explain how to treat an ab-
    sentee Indian father who had next-to-no involvement with
    his child in the first few months of her life. That category
    of fathers may include some who would prove highly un-
    suitable parents, some who would be suitable, and a range
    of others in between. Most of those who fall within that
    category seem to fall outside the scope of the language of
    
    25 U. S. C. §§1912
    (d) and (f ). Thus, while I agree that the
    better reading of the statute is, as the majority concludes,
    to exclude most of those fathers, ante, at 8, 12, I also un-
    derstand the risk that, from a policy perspective, the
    Court’s interpretation could prove to exclude too many.
    See post, at 13, 22–23 (SOTOMAYOR, J., dissenting).
    Second, we should decide here no more than is neces-
    sary. Thus, this case does not involve a father with visita-
    tion rights or a father who has paid “all of his child
    support obligations.” See post, at 13. Neither does it involve
    special circumstances such as a father who was deceived
    about the existence of the child or a father who was pre-
    vented from supporting his child. See post, at 13 n. 8. The
    Court need not, and in my view does not, now decide
    whether or how §§1912(d) and (f ) apply where those cir-
    2              ADOPTIVE COUPLE v. BABY GIRL
    BREYER, J., concurring
    cumstances are present.
    Third, other statutory provisions not now before us may
    nonetheless prove relevant in cases of this kind. Section
    1915(a) grants an adoptive “preference” to “(1) a member
    of the child’s extended family; (2) other members of the
    Indian child’s tribe; or (3) other Indian families . . . . in the
    absence of good cause to the contrary.” Further, §1915(c)
    allows the “Indian child’s tribe” to “establish a different
    order of preference by resolution.” Could these provisions
    allow an absentee father to re-enter the special statutory
    order of preference with support from the tribe, and sub-
    ject to a court’s consideration of “good cause?” I raise, but
    do not here try to answer, the question.
    Cite as: 570 U. S. ____ (2013)            1
    SCALIA, J., dissenting
    SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
    _________________
    No. 12–399
    _________________
    ADOPTIVE COUPLE, PETITIONERS v. BABY GIRL,
    A MINOR CHILD UNDER THE AGE OF
    FOURTEEN YEARS, ET AL.
    ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI TO THE SUPREME COURT OF
    SOUTH CAROLINA
    [June 25, 2013]
    JUSTICE SCALIA, dissenting.
    I join JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR’s dissent except as to one
    detail. I reject the conclusion that the Court draws from
    the words “continued custody” in 25 U. S. C §1912(f) not
    because “literalness may strangle meaning,” see post, at
    11, but because there is no reason that “continued” must
    refer to custody in the past rather than custody in the
    future. I read the provision as requiring the court to
    satisfy itself (beyond a reasonable doubt) not merely that
    initial or temporary custody is not “likely to result in
    serious emotional or physical damage to the child,” but
    that continued custody is not likely to do so. See Web-
    ster’s New International Dictionary 577 (2d ed. 1950)
    (defining “continued” as “[p]rotracted in time or space, esp.
    without interruption; constant”). For the reasons set forth
    in JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR’s dissent, that connotation is much
    more in accord with the rest of the statute.
    While I am at it, I will add one thought. The Court’s
    opinion, it seems to me, needlessly demeans the rights of
    parenthood. It has been the constant practice of the com-
    mon law to respect the entitlement of those who bring a
    child into the world to raise that child. We do not inquire
    whether leaving a child with his parents is “in the best
    interest of the child.” It sometimes is not; he would be
    2             ADOPTIVE COUPLE v. BABY GIRL
    SCALIA, J., dissenting
    better off raised by someone else. But parents have their
    rights, no less than children do. This father wants to raise
    his daughter, and the statute amply protects his right to
    do so. There is no reason in law or policy to dilute that
    protection.
    Cite as: 570 U. S. ____ (2013)             1
    SOTOMAYOR, J., dissenting
    SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
    _________________
    No. 12–399
    _________________
    ADOPTIVE COUPLE, PETITIONERS v. BABY GIRL,
    A MINOR CHILD UNDER THE AGE OF
    FOURTEEN YEARS, ET AL.
    ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI TO THE SUPREME COURT OF
    SOUTH CAROLINA
    [June 25, 2013]
    JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR, with whom JUSTICE GINSBURG
    and JUSTICE KAGAN join, and with whom JUSTICE SCALIA
    joins in part, dissenting.
    A casual reader of the Court’s opinion could be forgiven
    for thinking this an easy case, one in which the text of the
    applicable statute clearly points the way to the only sen-
    sible result. In truth, however, the path from the text of
    the Indian Child Welfare Act of 1978 (ICWA) to the result the
    Court reaches is anything but clear, and its result any­
    thing but right.
    The reader’s first clue that the majority’s supposedly
    straightforward reasoning is flawed is that not all Mem­
    bers who adopt its interpretation believe it is compelled by
    the text of the statute, see ante, at 1 (THOMAS, J., concur­
    ring); nor are they all willing to accept the consequences
    it will necessarily have beyond the specific factual sce-
    nario confronted here, see ante, at 1 (BREYER, J., concurring).
    The second clue is that the majority begins its analysis by
    plucking out of context a single phrase from the last clause
    of the last subsection of the relevant provision, and then
    builds its entire argument upon it. That is not how we
    ordinarily read statutes. The third clue is that the major-
    ity openly professes its aversion to Congress’ explicitly
    stated purpose in enacting the statute. The majority ex-
    2             ADOPTIVE COUPLE v. BABY GIRL
    SOTOMAYOR, J., dissenting
    presses concern that reading the Act to mean what it
    says will make it more difficult to place Indian children in
    adoptive homes, see ante, at 14, 16, but the Congress that
    enacted the statute announced its intent to stop “an
    alarmingly high percentage of Indian families [from being]
    broken up” by, among other things, a trend of “plac[ing]
    [Indian children] in non-Indian . . . adoptive homes.” 
    25 U. S. C. §1901
    (4). Policy disagreement with Congress’ judg-
    ment is not a valid reason for this Court to distort the pro­
    visions of the Act. Unlike the majority, I cannot adopt
    a reading of ICWA that is contrary to both its text and its
    stated purpose. I respectfully dissent.
    I
    Beginning its reading with the last clause of §1912(f ),
    the majority concludes that a single phrase appearing
    there—“continued custody”—means that the entirety of
    the subsection is inapplicable to any parent, however
    committed, who has not previously had physical or legal
    custody of his child. Working back to front, the majority
    then concludes that §1912(d), tainted by its association
    with §1912(f ), is also inapplicable; in the majority’s view,
    a family bond that does not take custodial form is not a
    family bond worth preserving from “breakup.” Because
    there are apparently no limits on the contaminating power
    of this single phrase, the majority does not stop there.
    Under its reading, §1903(9), which makes biological fa­
    thers “parent[s]” under this federal statute (and where,
    again, the phrase “continued custody” does not appear),
    has substantive force only when a birth father has physi­
    cal or state-recognized legal custody of his daughter.
    When it excludes noncustodial biological fathers from
    the Act’s substantive protections, this textually backward
    reading misapprehends ICWA’s structure and scope.
    Moreover, notwithstanding the majority’s focus on the per-
    ceived parental shortcomings of Birth Father, its rea­
    Cite as: 570 U. S. ____ (2013)              3
    SOTOMAYOR, J., dissenting
    soning necessarily extends to all Indian parents who have
    never had custody of their children, no matter how fully
    those parents have embraced the financial and emotional
    responsibilities of parenting. The majority thereby trans­
    forms a statute that was intended to provide uniform
    federal standards for child custody proceedings involving
    Indian children and their biological parents into an illogi­
    cal piecemeal scheme.
    A
    Better to start at the beginning and consider the opera­
    tion of the statute as a whole. Cf. ante, at 13 (“[S]tatutory
    construction ‘is a holistic endeavor[,]’ and . . . ‘[a] provision
    that may seem ambiguous in isolation is often clarified by
    the remainder of the statutory scheme’ ” (quoting United
    Sav. Assn. of Tex. v. Timbers of Inwood Forest Associates,
    Ltd., 
    484 U. S. 365
    , 371 (1988))).
    ICWA commences with express findings. Congress rec­
    ognized that “there is no resource that is more vital to
    the continued existence and integrity of Indian tribes than
    their children,” 
    25 U. S. C. §1901
    (3), and it found that this
    resource was threatened. State authorities insufficiently
    sensitive to “the essential tribal relations of Indian people
    and the cultural and social standards prevailing in Indian
    communities and families” were breaking up Indian fami­
    lies and moving Indian children to non-Indian homes and
    institutions. See §§1901(4)–(5). As §1901(4) makes clear,
    and as this Court recognized in Mississippi Band of
    Choctaw Indians v. Holyfield, 
    490 U. S. 30
    , 33 (1989),
    adoptive placements of Indian children with non-Indian
    families contributed significantly to the overall problem. See
    §1901(4) (finding that “an alarmingly high percentage of
    [Indian] children are placed in non-Indian . . . adoptive
    homes”).
    Consistent with these findings, Congress declared its
    purpose “to protect the best interests of Indian children
    4             ADOPTIVE COUPLE v. BABY GIRL
    SOTOMAYOR, J., dissenting
    and to promote the stability and security of Indian tribes
    and families by the establishment of minimum Federal
    standards” applicable to child custody proceedings involv­
    ing Indian children. §1902. Section 1903 then goes on to
    establish the reach of these protections through its defi-
    nitional provisions. For present purposes, two of these
    definitions are crucial to understanding the statute’s full
    scope.
    First, ICWA defines the term “parent” broadly to mean
    “any biological parent . . . of an Indian child or any In-
    dian person who has lawfully adopted an Indian child.”
    §1903(9). It is undisputed that Baby Girl is an “Indian
    child” within the meaning of the statute, see §1903(4);
    ante, at 2, n. 1, and Birth Father consequently qualifies
    as a “parent” under the Act. The statutory definition of
    parent “does not include the unwed father where paternity
    has not been acknowledged or established,” §1903(9), but
    Birth Father’s biological paternity has never been ques­
    tioned by any party and was confirmed by a DNA test
    during the state court proceedings, App. to Pet. for Cert.
    109a (Sealed).
    Petitioners and Baby Girl’s guardian ad litem devote
    many pages of briefing to arguing that the term “parent”
    should be defined with reference to the law of the State in
    which an ICWA child custody proceeding takes place. See
    Brief for Petitioners 19–29; Brief for Respondent Guardian
    Ad Litem 32–41. These arguments, however, are incon­
    sistent with our recognition in Holyfield that Congress
    intended the critical terms of the statute to have uniform
    federal definitions. See 490 U. S., at 44–45. It is therefore
    unsurprising, although far from unimportant, that the
    majority assumes for the purposes of its analysis that
    Birth Father is an ICWA “parent.” See ante, at 7.
    Second, the Act’s comprehensive definition of “child
    custody proceeding” includes not only “ ‘adoptive place­
    ment[s],’ ” “ ‘preadoptive placement[s],’ ” and “ ‘foster care
    Cite as: 570 U. S. ____ (2013)                  5
    SOTOMAYOR, J., dissenting
    placement[s],’ ” but also “ ‘termination of parental rights’ ”
    proceedings. §1903(1). This last category encompasses
    “any action resulting in the termination of the parent-
    child relationship,” §1903(1)(ii) (emphasis added). So far,
    then, it is clear that Birth Father has a federally recog­
    nized status as Baby Girl’s “parent” and that his “parent­
    child relationship” with her is subject to the protections of
    the Act.
    These protections are numerous. Had Birth Father
    petitioned to remove this proceeding to tribal court, for
    example, the state court would have been obligated to
    transfer it absent an objection from Birth Mother or good
    cause to the contrary. See §1911(b). Any voluntary con­
    sent Birth Father gave to Baby Girl’s adoption would have
    been invalid unless written and executed before a judge
    and would have been revocable up to the time a final
    decree of adoption was entered.1 See §§1913(a), (c). And
    §1912, the center of the dispute here, sets forth procedural
    and substantive standards applicable in “involuntary
    proceeding[s] in a State court,” including foster care
    placements of Indian children and termination of paren­
    tal rights proceedings. §1912(a). I consider §1912’s provi­
    sions in order.
    Section 1912(a) requires that any party seeking “termi­
    nation of parental rights t[o] an Indian child” provide
    notice to both the child’s “parent or Indian custodian”
    and the child’s tribe “of the pending proceedings and of
    their right of intervention.” Section 1912(b) mandates
    that counsel be provided for an indigent “parent or In-
    dian custodian” in any “termination proceeding.” Section
    ——————
    1 For this reason, the South Carolina Supreme Court held that Birth
    Father did not give valid consent to Baby Girl’s adoption when, four
    months after her birth, he signed papers stating that he accepted
    service and was not contesting the adoption. See 398 S. C. 625, 645–
    646, 
    731 S. E. 2d 550
    , 561 (2012). See also ante, at 5. Petitioners do
    not challenge this aspect of the South Carolina court’s holding.
    6                     ADOPTIVE COUPLE v. BABY GIRL
    SOTOMAYOR, J., dissenting
    1912(c) also gives all “part[ies]” to a termination proceed­
    ing—which, thanks to §§1912(a) and (b), will always in­
    clude a biological father if he desires to be present—the
    right to inspect all material “reports or other documents
    filed with the court.” By providing notice, counsel, and
    access to relevant documents, the statute ensures a biolog­
    ical father’s meaningful participation in an adoption pro­
    ceeding where the termination of his parental rights is at
    issue.
    These protections are consonant with the principle,
    recognized in our cases, that the biological bond between
    parent and child is meaningful. “[A] natural parent’s
    desire for and right to the companionship, care, custody,
    and management of his or her children,” we have ex­
    plained, “is an interest far more precious than any prop-
    erty right.” Santosky v. Kramer, 
    455 U. S. 745
    , 758–759
    (1982) (internal quotation marks omitted). See also infra,
    at 19-20. Although the Constitution does not compel the
    protection of a biological father’s parent-child relationship
    until he has taken steps to cultivate it, this Court has
    nevertheless recognized that “the biological connection . . .
    offers the natural father an opportunity that no other
    male possesses to develop a relationship with his off­
    spring.” Lehr v. Robertson, 
    463 U. S. 248
    , 262 (1983).
    Federal recognition of a parent-child relationship between
    a birth father and his child is consistent with ICWA’s
    purpose of providing greater protection for the familial
    bonds between Indian parents and their children than
    state law may afford.
    The majority does not and cannot reasonably dispute
    that ICWA grants biological fathers, as “parent[s],” the
    right to be present at a termination of parental rights
    proceeding and to have their views and claims heard
    there.2 But the majority gives with one hand and takes
    ——————
    2 Petitioners   concede that, assuming Birth Father is a “parent” under
    Cite as: 570 U. S. ____ (2013)                    7
    SOTOMAYOR, J., dissenting
    away with the other. Having assumed a uniform federal
    definition of “parent” that confers certain procedural
    rights, the majority then illogically concludes that ICWA’s
    substantive protections are available only to a subset of
    “parent[s]”: those who have previously had physical or
    state-recognized legal custody of his or her child. The
    statute does not support this departure.
    Section 1912(d) provides that
    “Any party seeking to effect a foster care placement
    of, or termination of parental rights to, an Indian child
    under State law shall satisfy the court that active
    efforts have been made to provide remedial services
    and rehabilitative programs designed to prevent the
    breakup of the Indian family and that these efforts
    have proved unsuccessful.” (Emphasis added.)
    In other words, subsection (d) requires that an attempt
    be made to cure familial deficiencies before the drastic
    measures of foster care placement or termination of paren­
    tal rights can be taken.
    The majority would hold that the use of the phrase
    “breakup of the Indian family” in this subsection means
    that it does not apply where a birth father has not previ­
    ously had custody of his child. Ante, at 12. But there is
    nothing about this capacious phrase that licenses such a
    narrowing construction. As the majority notes, “breakup”
    means “ ‘[t]he discontinuance of a relationship.’ ” Ante, at
    12 (quoting American Heritage Dictionary 235 (3d ed.
    1992)). So far, all of §1912’s provisions expressly apply in
    actions aimed at terminating the “parent-child relation­
    ship” that exists between a birth father and his child, and
    they extend to it meaningful protections. As a logical
    matter, that relationship is fully capable of being pre­
    ——————
    ICWA, the notice and counsel provisions of 
    25 U. S. C. §§1912
    (a) and (b)
    apply to him. See Tr. of Oral Arg. 13.
    8                ADOPTIVE COUPLE v. BABY GIRL
    SOTOMAYOR, J., dissenting
    served via remedial services and rehabilitation programs.
    See infra, at 15–17. Nothing in the text of subsection (d)
    indicates that this blood relationship should be excluded
    from the category of familial “relationships” that the pro-
    vision aims to save from “discontinuance.”
    The majority, reaching the contrary conclusion, asserts
    baldly that “when an Indian parent abandons an Indian
    child prior to birth and that child has never been in the
    Indian parent’s legal or physical custody, there is no ‘rela­
    tionship’ that would be ‘discontinu[ed]’ . . . by the termina­
    tion of the Indian parent’s rights.” Ante, at 12. Says who?
    Certainly not the statute. Section 1903 recognizes Birth
    Father as Baby Girl’s “parent,” and, in conjunction with
    ICWA’s other provisions, it further establishes that their
    “parent-child relationship” is protected under federal law.
    In the face of these broad definitions, the majority has no
    warrant to substitute its own policy views for Congress’ by
    saying that “no ‘relationship’ ” exists between Birth Father
    and Baby Girl simply because, based on the hotly con-
    tested facts of this case, it views their family bond as in-
    sufficiently substantial to deserve protection.3 
    Ibid.
    The majority states that its “interpretation of §1912(d)
    is . . . confirmed by the provision’s placement next to
    ——————
    3 The majority’s discussion of §1912(d) repeatedly references Birth
    Father’s purported “abandon[ment]” of Baby Girl, ante, at 12, 13, n. 8,
    14, and it contends that its holding with regard to this provision is
    limited to such circumstances, see ante, at 13, n. 8; see also ante, at 1
    (BREYER, J., concurring). While I would welcome any limitations on the
    majority’s holding given that it is contrary to the language and purpose
    of the statute, the majority never explains either the textual basis or
    the precise scope of its “abandon[ment]” limitation. I expect that the
    majority’s inexact use of the term “abandon[ment]” will sow confusion,
    because it is a commonly used term of art in state family law that does
    not have a uniform meaning from State to State. See generally 1 J.
    Hollinger, Adoption Law and Practice §4.04[1][a][ii] (2012) (discussing
    various state-law standards for establishing parental abandonment of
    a child).
    Cite as: 570 U. S. ____ (2013)                   9
    SOTOMAYOR, J., dissenting
    §1912(e) and §1912(f ),” both of which use the phrase “ ‘con­
    tinued custody.’ ” Ante, at 13. This is the only aspect of
    the majority’s argument regarding §1912(d) that is based
    on ICWA’s actual text rather than layers of assertion su-
    perimposed on the text; but the conclusion the majority
    draws from the juxtaposition of these provisions is exactly
    backward.
    Section 1912(f ) is paired with §1912(e), and as the ma­
    jority notes, both come on the heels of the requirement of
    rehabilitative efforts just reviewed. The language of the
    two provisions is nearly identical; subsection (e) is headed
    “Foster care placement orders,” and subsection (f ), the
    relevant provision here, is headed “Parental rights termi­
    nation orders.” Subsection (f ) reads in its entirety,
    “No termination of parental rights may be ordered
    in such proceeding in the absence of a determination,
    supported by evidence beyond a reasonable doubt, in­
    cluding testimony of qualified expert witnesses, that
    the continued custody of the child by the parent or In­
    dian custodian is likely to result in serious emotional
    or physical damage to the child.” §1912(f ).4
    The immediate inference to be drawn from the statute’s
    structure is that subsections (e) and (f ) work in tandem
    with the rehabilitative efforts required by (d). Under
    subsection (d), state authorities must attempt to provide
    “remedial services and rehabilitative programs” aimed at
    avoiding foster care placement or termination of parental
    rights; (e) and (f ), in turn, bar state authorities from order­
    ——————
    4 The full text of subsection (e) is as follows:
    “No foster care placement may be ordered in such proceeding in
    the absence of a determination, supported by clear and convincing evi-
    dence, including testimony of qualified expert witnesses, that the
    continued custody of the child by the parent or Indian custodian is
    likely to result in serious emotional or physical damage to the child.”
    §1912(e).
    10               ADOPTIVE COUPLE v. BABY GIRL
    SOTOMAYOR, J., dissenting
    ing foster care or terminating parental rights until these
    curative efforts have failed and it is established that the
    child will suffer “serious emotional or physical damage” if
    his or her familial situation is not altered. Nothing in
    subsections (a) through (d) suggests a limitation on the
    types of parental relationships that are protected by any of
    the provisions of §1912, and there is nothing in the struc­
    ture of §1912 that would lead a reader to expect subsection
    (e) or (f ) to introduce any such qualification. Indeed, both
    subsections, in their opening lines, refer back to the prior
    provisions of §1912 with the phrase “in such proceeding.”
    This language indicates, quite logically, that in actions
    where subsections (a), (b), (c), and (d) apply, (e) and (f )
    apply too.5
    All this, and still the most telling textual evidence is yet
    to come: The text of the subsection begins by announcing,
    “[n]o termination of parental rights may be ordered” un­
    less the specified evidentiary showing is made. To repeat,
    a “termination of parental rights” includes “any action
    resulting in the termination of the parent-child relation­
    ship,” 
    25 U. S. C. §1903
    (1)(ii) (emphasis added), includ-
    ing the relationship Birth Father, as an ICWA “parent,”
    has with Baby Girl. The majority’s reading disregards
    the Act’s sweeping definition of “termination of parental
    rights,” which is not limited to terminations of custodial
    relationships.
    The entire foundation of the majority’s argument that
    ——————
    5 For these reasons, I reject the argument advanced by the United
    States that subsection (d) applies in the circumstances of this case but
    subsection (f ) does not. See Brief for United States as Amicus Curiae
    24–26. The United States’ position is contrary to the interrelated
    nature of §§1912(d), (e), and (f ). Under the reading that the United
    States proposes, in a case such as this one the curative provision would
    stand alone; ICWA would provide no evidentiary or substantive stand­
    ards by which to measure whether foster care placement or termination
    of parental rights could be ordered in the event that rehabilitative
    efforts did not succeed. Such a scheme would be oddly incomplete.
    Cite as: 570 U. S. ____ (2013)                 11
    SOTOMAYOR, J., dissenting
    subsection (f ) does not apply is the lonely phrase “contin­
    ued custody.” It simply cannot bear the interpretive
    weight the majority would place on it.
    Because a primary dictionary definition of “continued” is
    “ ‘carried on or kept up without cessation,’ ” ante, at 8
    (brackets omitted), the majority concludes that §1912(f )
    “does not apply in cases where the Indian parent never
    had custody of the Indian child,” ante, at 8. Emphasizing
    that Birth Father never had physical custody or, under
    state law, legal custody of Baby Girl, the majority finds
    the statute inapplicable here. Ante, at 10–11. But “liter­
    alness may strangle meaning.” Utah Junk Co. v. Porter,
    
    328 U. S. 39
    , 44 (1946). See also Robinson v. Shell Oil Co.,
    
    519 U. S. 337
    , 341–345 (1997) (noting that a term that
    may “[a]t first blush” seem unambiguous can prove other­
    wise when examined in the context of the statute as a
    whole).6 In light of the structure of §1912, which indicates
    that subsection (f ) is applicable to the same actions to
    which subsections (a) through (d) are applicable; the use of
    the phrase “such proceeding[s]” at the start of subsection
    (f ) to reinforce this structural inference; and finally, the
    provision’s explicit statement that it applies to “termina­
    tion of parental rights” proceedings, the necessary conclu­
    sion is that the word “custody” does not strictly denote a
    state-recognized custodial relationship. If one refers back
    to the Act’s definitional section, this conclusion is not
    surprising. Section 1903(1) includes “any action resulting
    in the termination of the parent-child relationship” within
    the meaning of “child custody proceeding,” thereby belying
    any congressional intent to give the term “custody” a
    narrow and exclusive definition throughout the statute.
    ——————
    6 The majority’s interpretation is unpersuasive even if one focuses
    exclusively on the phrase “continued custody” because, as JUSTICE
    SCALIA explains, ante, at 1 (dissenting opinion), nothing about the
    adjective “continued” mandates the retrospective, rather than prospec­
    tive, application of §1912(f )’s standard.
    12               ADOPTIVE COUPLE v. BABY GIRL
    SOTOMAYOR, J., dissenting
    In keeping with §1903(1) and the structure and lan­
    guage of §1912 overall, the phrase “continued custody” is
    most sensibly read to refer generally to the continuation of
    the parent-child relationship that an ICWA “parent” has
    with his or her child. A court applying §1912(f ) where the
    parent does not have pre-existing custody should, as Birth
    Father argues, determine whether the party seeking ter­
    mination of parental rights has established that the con­
    tinuation of the parent-child relationship will result in
    “serious emotional or physical damage to the child.”7
    The majority is willing to assume, for the sake of argu­
    ment, that Birth Father is a “parent” within the meaning
    of ICWA. But the majority fails to account for all that
    follows from that assumption. The majority repeatedly
    passes over the term “termination of parental rights” that,
    as defined by §1903, clearly encompasses an action aimed
    at severing Birth Father’s “parent-child relationship” with
    Baby Girl. The majority chooses instead to focus on
    phrases not statutorily defined that it then uses to exclude
    Birth Father from the benefits of his parental status.
    When one must disregard a statute’s use of terms that
    have been explicitly defined by Congress, that should be a
    signal that one is distorting, rather than faithfully read­
    ing, the law in question.
    B
    The majority also does not acknowledge the full impli­
    ——————
    7 The majority overlooks Birth Father’s principal arguments when it
    dismisses his reading of §1912(f ) as “nonsensical.” Ante, at 8. He does
    argue that if one accepts petitioners’ view that it is impossible to make
    a determination of likely harm when a parent lacks custody, then the
    consequence would be that “ ‘[n]o termination of parental rights may be
    ordered.’ ” Brief for Respondent Birth Father 39 (quoting §1912(f )).
    But Birth Father’s primary arguments assume that it is indeed possible
    to make a determination of likely harm in the circumstances of this
    case, and that parental rights can be terminated if §1912(f ) is met. See
    id., at 40–42.
    Cite as: 570 U. S. ____ (2013)                    13
    SOTOMAYOR, J., dissenting
    cations of its assumption that there are some ICWA
    “parent[s]” to whom §§1912(d) and (f ) do not apply. Its dis­
    cussion focuses on Birth Father’s particular actions, but
    nothing in the majority’s reasoning limits its manufac­
    tured class of semiprotected ICWA parents to biological
    fathers who failed to support their child’s mother during
    pregnancy. Its logic would apply equally to noncustodial
    fathers who have actively participated in their child’s
    upbringing.
    Consider an Indian father who, though he has never had
    custody of his biological child, visits her and pays all of his
    child support obligations.8 Suppose that, due to deficien­
    ——————
    8 The   majority attempts to minimize the consequences of its holding
    by asserting that the parent-child relationships of noncustodial fathers
    with visitation rights will be at stake in an ICWA proceeding in only
    “a relatively small class of cases.” Ante, at 13, n. 8. But it offers no
    support for this assertion, beyond speculating that there will not be
    many fathers affected by its interpretation of §1912(d) because it is
    qualified by an “abandon[ment]” limitation. Ibid. Tellingly, the major-
    ity has nothing to say about §1912(f ), despite the fact that its interpre­
    tation of that provision is not limited in a similar way. In any event,
    this example by no means exhausts the class of semiprotected ICWA
    parents that the majority’s opinion creates. It also includes, for exam­
    ple, biological fathers who have not yet established a relationship with
    their child because the child’s mother never informed them of the
    pregnancy, see, e.g., In re Termination of Parental Rights of Biological
    Parents of Baby Boy W., 
    1999 OK 74
    , 
    988 P. 2d 1270
    , told them falsely
    that the pregnancy ended in miscarriage or termination, see, e.g., A
    Child’s Hope, LLC v. Doe, 178 N. C. App. 96, 
    630 S. E. 2d 673
     (2006), or
    otherwise obstructed the father’s involvement in the child’s life, see,
    e.g., In re Baby Girl W., 
    728 S. W. 2d 545
     (Mo. App. 1987) (birth mother
    moved and did not inform father of her whereabouts); In re Petition of
    Doe, 
    159 Ill. 2d 347
    , 
    638 N. E. 2d 181
     (1994) (father paid pregnancy
    expenses until birth mother cut off contact with him and told him that
    their child had died shortly after birth). And it includes biological
    fathers who did not contribute to pregnancy expenses because they
    were unable to do so, whether because the father lacked sufficient
    means, the expenses were covered by a third party, or the birth mother
    did not pass on the relevant bills. See, e.g., In re Adoption of B. V.,
    
    2001 UT App 290
    , ¶¶ 24–31, 
    33 P. 3d 1083
    , 1087–1088.
    14                ADOPTIVE COUPLE v. BABY GIRL
    SOTOMAYOR, J., dissenting
    cies in the care the child received from her custodial
    parent, the State placed the child with a foster family
    and proposed her ultimate adoption by them. Clearly,
    the father’s parental rights would have to be terminated
    before the adoption could go forward.9 On the majority’s
    view, notwithstanding the fact that this father would be
    a “parent” under ICWA, he would not receive the benefit
    of either §1912(d) or §1912(f ). Presumably the court con­
    sidering the adoption petition would have to apply some
    standard to determine whether termination of his paren­
    tal rights was appropriate. But from whence would that
    standard come?
    Not from the statute Congress drafted, according to the
    majority. The majority suggests that it might come from
    state law. See ante, at 13, n. 8. But it is incongruous to
    suppose that Congress intended a patchwork of federal
    and state law to apply in termination of parental rights
    proceedings. Congress enacted a statute aimed at protect­
    ——————
    The majority expresses the concern that my reading of the statute
    would produce “far-reaching consequences,” because “even a sperm
    donor” would be entitled to ICWA’s protections. Ante, at 13–14, n. 8. If
    there are any examples of women who go to the trouble and expense of
    artificial insemination and then carry the child to term, only to put the
    child up for adoption or be found so unfit as mothers that state authori­
    ties attempt an involuntary adoptive placement—thereby necessitating
    termination of the parental rights of the sperm donor father—the ma­
    jority does not cite them. As between a possibly overinclusive in­
    terpretation of the statute that covers this unlikely class of cases, and
    the majority’s underinclusive interpretation that has the very real
    consequence of denying ICWA’s protections to all noncustodial biologi­
    cal fathers, it is surely the majority’s reading that is contrary to ICWA’s
    design.
    9 With a few exceptions not relevant here, before a final decree of
    adoption may be entered, one of two things must happen: “the biological
    parents must either voluntarily relinquish their parental rights or have
    their rights involuntarily terminated.” 2A. Haralambie, Handling
    Child Custody, Abuse and Adoption Cases §14.1, pp.764–765 (3d ed.
    2009) (footnote omitted).
    Cite as: 570 U. S. ____ (2013)           15
    SOTOMAYOR, J., dissenting
    ing the familial relationships between Indian parents and
    their children because it concluded that state authorities
    “often failed to recognize the essential tribal relations of
    Indian people and the cultural and social standards pre­
    vailing in Indian communities and families.” 
    25 U. S. C. §1901
    (5). It provided a “minimum Federal standar[d],”
    §1902, for termination of parental rights that is more
    demanding than the showing of unfitness under a high
    “clear and convincing evidence” standard that is the norm
    in the States, see 1 J. Hollinger, Adoption Law and Prac­
    tice §2.10 (2012); Santosky, 
    455 U. S., at
    767–768.
    While some States might provide protections compar-
    able to §1912(d)’s required remedial efforts and §1912(f )’s
    heightened standard for termination of parental rights,
    many will provide less. There is no reason to believe
    Congress wished to leave protection of the parental rights
    of a subset of ICWA “parent[s]” dependent on the happen­
    stance of where a particular “child custody proceeding”
    takes place. I would apply, as the statute construed in
    its totality commands, the standards Congress provided
    in §§1912(d) and (f ) to the termination of all ICWA
    “parent[s’]” parent-child relationships.
    II
    The majority’s textually strained and illogical reading of
    the statute might be explicable, if not justified, if there
    were reason to believe that it avoided anomalous results
    or furthered a clear congressional policy. But neither of
    these conditions is present here.
    A
    With respect to §1912(d), the majority states that it
    would be “unusual” to apply a rehabilitation requirement
    where a natural parent has never had custody of his child.
    Ante, at 14. The majority does not support this bare asser­
    tion, and in fact state child welfare authorities can and do
    16                ADOPTIVE COUPLE v. BABY GIRL
    SOTOMAYOR, J., dissenting
    provide reunification services for biological fathers who
    have not previously had custody of their children.10 And
    notwithstanding the South Carolina Supreme Court’s im-
    precise interpretation of the provision, see 398 S. C., at
    647–648, 731 S. E. 2d, at 562, §1912(d) does not require
    the prospective adoptive family to themselves undertake
    the mandated rehabilitative efforts. Rather, it requires the
    party seeking termination of parental rights to “satisfy
    the court that active efforts have been made” to provide
    appropriate remedial services.
    In other words, the prospective adoptive couple have to
    make an evidentiary showing, not undertake person-to­
    person remedial outreach. The services themselves might
    be attempted by the Indian child’s Tribe, a state agency,
    or a private adoption agency. Such remedial efforts are
    a familiar requirement of child welfare law, including fed-
    eral child welfare policy. See 
    42 U. S. C. §671
    (a)(15)(B)
    (requiring States receiving federal funds for foster care
    and adoption assistance to make “reasonable efforts . . . to
    preserve and reunify families” prior to foster care place­
    ment or removal of a child from its home).
    ——————
    10 See, e.g., Cal. Welf. & Inst. Code Ann. §361.5(a) (West Supp. 2013);
    Francisco G. v. Superior Court, 
    91 Cal. App. 4th 586
    , 596, 
    110 Cal. Rptr. 2d 679
    , 687 (2001) (stating that “the juvenile court ‘may’ order
    reunification services for a biological father if the court determines that
    the services will benefit the child”); In re T. B. W., 
    312 Ga. App. 733
    ,
    734–735, 
    719 S. E. 2d 589
    , 591 (2011) (describing reunification services
    provided to biological father beginning when “he had yet to establish
    his paternity” under state law, including efforts to facilitate visitation
    and involving father in family “ ‘team meetings’ ”); In re Guardianship
    of DMH, 161 N. J. 365, 391–394, 
    736 A. 2d 1261
    , 1275–1276 (1999)
    (discussing what constitutes “reasonable efforts” to reunify a noncusto­
    dial biological father with his children in accordance with New Jersey
    statutory requirements); In re Bernard T., 
    319 S. W. 3d 586
    , 600 (Tenn.
    2010) (stating that “in appropriate circumstances, the Department [of
    Children’s Services] must make reasonable efforts to reunite a child
    with his or her biological parents or legal parents or even with the
    child’s putative biological father”).
    Cite as: 570 U. S. ____ (2013)                  17
    SOTOMAYOR, J., dissenting
    There is nothing “bizarre,” ante, at 14, about placing on
    the party seeking to terminate a father’s parental rights
    the burden of showing that the step is necessary as well as
    justified. “For . . . natural parents, . . . the consequence of
    an erroneous termination [of parental rights] is the un­
    necessary destruction of their natural family.” Santosky,
    
    455 U. S., at 766
    . In any event, the question is a nonissue
    in this case given the family court’s finding that Birth
    Father is “a fit and proper person to have custody of his
    child” who “has demonstrated [his] ability to parent effec­
    tively” and who possesses “unwavering love for this child.”
    App. to Pet. for Cert. 128a (Sealed). Petitioners cannot
    show that rehabilitative efforts have “proved unsuccess­
    ful,” 
    25 U. S. C. §1912
    (d), because Birth Father is not in
    need of rehabilitation.11
    B
    On a more general level, the majority intimates that
    ICWA grants Birth Father an undeserved windfall: in the
    majority’s words, an “ICWA trump card” he can “play . . .
    at the eleventh hour to override the mother’s decision and
    the child’s best interests.” Ante, at 16. The implicit argu­
    ment is that Congress could not possibly have intended to
    recognize a parent-child relationship between Birth Fa­
    ther and Baby Girl that would have to be legally termi­
    nated (either by valid consent or involuntary termination)
    before the adoption could proceed.
    ——————
    11 The majority’s concerns about what might happen if no state or
    tribal authority stepped in to provide remedial services are therefore
    irrelevant here. Ante, at 14, n. 9. But as a general matter, if a parent
    has rights that are an obstacle to an adoption, the state- and federal­
    law safeguards of those rights must be honored, irrespective of pro­
    spective adoptive parents’ understandable and valid desire to see the
    adoption finalized. “We must remember that the purpose of an adop­
    tion is to provide a home for a child, not a child for a home.” In re
    Petition of Doe, 
    159 Ill. 2d, at 368
    , 
    638 N. E. 2d, at 190
     (Heiple, J,.
    supplemental opinion supporting denial of rehearing).
    18                ADOPTIVE COUPLE v. BABY GIRL
    SOTOMAYOR, J., dissenting
    But this supposed anomaly is illusory. In fact, the law
    of at least 15 States did precisely that at the time ICWA
    was passed.12 And the law of a number of States still does
    so. The State of Arizona, for example, requires that notice
    of an adoption petition be given to all “potential father[s]”
    and that they be informed of their “right to seek custody.”
    
    Ariz. Rev. Stat. §§8
    –106(G)–(J) (West Supp. 2012). In
    Washington, an “alleged father[’s]” consent to adoption
    is required absent the termination of his parental rights,
    
    Wash. Rev. Code §§26.33.020
    (1), 26.33.160(1)(b) (2012);
    and those rights may be terminated only “upon a showing
    by clear, cogent, and convincing evidence” not only that
    termination is in the best interest of the child and that the
    ——————
    12 See 
    Ariz. Rev. Stat. Ann. §8
    –106(A)(1)(c) (1974–1983 West Supp.)
    (consent of both natural parents necessary); 
    Iowa Code §§600.3
    (2),
    600A.2, 600A.8 (1977) (same); Ill. Comp. Stat., ch. 40, §1510 (West
    1977) (same); 
    Nev. Rev. Stat. §§127.040
    , 127.090 (1971) (same); R. I.
    Gen. Laws §§15–7–5, 15–7–7 (Bobbs-Merrill 1970) (same); 
    Conn. Gen. Stat. §§45
    –61d, 45–61i(b)(2) (1979) (natural father’s consent required if
    paternity acknowledged or judicially established); 
    Fla. Stat. §63.062
    (1979) (same); Ore. Rev. Stat. §§109.092, 109.312 (1975) (same); S. D.
    Codified Laws §§25–6–1.1, 25–6–4 (Allen Smith 1976) (natural father’s
    consent required if mother identifies him or if paternity is judicially
    established); 
    Ky. Rev. Stat. Ann. §§199.500
    , 199.607 (Bobbs-Merrill
    Supp. 1980) (same); 
    Ala. Code §26
    –10–3 (Michie 1977) (natural father’s
    consent required when paternity judicially established); 
    Minn. Stat. §§259.24
    (a), 259.26(3)(a), (e), (f ), 259.261 (1978) (natural father’s
    consent required when identified on birth certificate, paternity judi-
    cially established, or paternity asserted by affidavit); N. H. Rev. Stat. Ann.
    §170–B:5(I)(d) (1977) (natural father’s consent required if he files notice
    of intent to claim paternity within set time from notice of prospective
    adoption); 
    Wash. Rev. Code §§26.32.040
    (5), 26.32.085 (1976) (natural
    father’s consent required if paternity acknowledged, judicially estab­
    lished, or he files notice of intent to claim paternity within set time
    from notice of prospective adoption); 
    W. Va. Code Ann. §48
    –4–1 (Michie
    Supp. 1979) (natural father’s consent required if father admits pater­
    nity by any means). See also Del. Code Ann., Tit. 13, §908(2) (Michie
    Supp. 1980) (natural father’s consent required unless court finds that
    dispensing with consent requirement is in best interests of the child);
    
    Wyo. Stat. Ann. §§1
    –22–108, 1–22–109 (Michie 1988) (same).
    Cite as: 570 U. S. ____ (2013)                    19
    SOTOMAYOR, J., dissenting
    father is withholding his consent to adoption contrary to
    child’s best interests, but also that the father “has failed
    to perform parental duties under circumstances showing
    a substantial lack of regard for his parental obligations,”
    §26.33.120(2).13
    Without doubt, laws protecting biological fathers’ paren­
    tal rights can lead—even outside the context of ICWA—to
    outcomes that are painful and distressing for both would­
    be adoptive families, who lose a much wanted child, and
    children who must make a difficult transition. See, e.g.,
    In re Adoption of Tobias D., 
    2012 Me. 45
    , ¶27, 
    40 A. 3d 990
    , 999 (recognizing that award of custody of 2½-year-old
    child to biological father under applicable state law once
    paternity is established will result in the “difficult and pain-
    ful” necessity of “removing the child from the only home
    he has ever known”). On the other hand, these rules
    recognize that biological fathers have a valid interest in a
    relationship with their child. See supra, at 6. And chil­
    dren have a reciprocal interest in knowing their biological
    parents. See Santosky, 
    455 U. S., at
    760–761, n. 11 (de­
    scribing the foreclosure of a newborn child’s opportunity to
    “ever know his natural parents” as a “los[s] [that] cannot
    be measured”). These rules also reflect the understanding
    that the biological bond between a parent and a child is a
    strong foundation on which a stable and caring relation­
    ship may be built. Many jurisdictions apply a custodial
    preference for a fit natural parent over a party lacking
    this biological link. See, e.g., Ex parte Terry, 
    494 So. 2d 628
    , 632 (Ala. 1986); Appeal of H. R., 
    581 A. 2d 1141
    , 1177
    (D. C. 1990) (opinion of Ferren, J.); Stuhr v. Stuhr, 
    240 Neb. 239
    , 245, 
    481 N. W. 2d 212
    , 216 (1992); In re Michael
    B., 80 N. Y. 2d 299, 309, 
    604 N. E. 2d 122
    , 127 (1992). Cf.
    Smith v. Organization of Foster Families For Equality &
    Reform, 
    431 U. S. 816
    , 845 (1977) (distinguishing a natu­
    ——————
    13 See   also, e.g., 
    Nev. Rev. Stat. §§127.040
    (1)(a), 128.150 (2011).
    20            ADOPTIVE COUPLE v. BABY GIRL
    SOTOMAYOR, J., dissenting
    ral parent’s “liberty interest in family privacy,” which has
    its source “in intrinsic human rights,” with a foster par­
    ent’s parallel interest in his or her relationship with a
    child, which has its “origins in an arrangement in which
    the State has been a partner from the outset”). This pref­
    erence is founded in the “presumption that fit parents act
    in the best interests of their children.” Troxel v. Granville,
    
    530 U. S. 57
    , 68 (2000) (plurality opinion). “ ‘[H]istorically
    [the law] has recognized that natural bonds of affection
    [will] lead parents’ ” to promote their child’s well-being.
    
    Ibid.
     (quoting Parham v. J. R., 
    442 U. S. 584
    , 602 (1979)).
    Balancing the legitimate interests of unwed biological
    fathers against the need for stability in a child’s family
    situation is difficult, to be sure, and States have, over the
    years, taken different approaches to the problem. Some
    States, like South Carolina, have opted to hew to the con­
    stitutional baseline established by this Court’s prece-
    dents and do not require a biological father’s consent to
    adoption unless he has provided financial support during
    pregnancy. See Quilloin v. Walcott, 
    434 U. S. 246
    , 254–
    256 (1978); Lehr, 
    463 U. S., at 261
    . Other States, how-
    ever, have decided to give the rights of biological fathers
    more robust protection and to afford them consent rights
    on the basis of their biological link to the child. At the
    time that ICWA was passed, as noted, over one-fourth of
    States did so. See supra, at 17–18.
    ICWA, on a straightforward reading of the statute, is
    consistent with the law of those States that protected, and
    protect, birth fathers’ rights more vigorously. This read­
    ing can hardly be said to generate an anomaly. ICWA, as
    all acknowledge, was “the product of rising concern . . .
    [about] abusive child welfare practices that resulted in the
    separation of large numbers of Indian children from their
    families.” Holyfield, 
    490 U. S., at 32
    . It stands to reason
    that the Act would not render the legal status of an Indian
    father’s relationship with his biological child fragile, but
    Cite as: 570 U. S. ____ (2013)                  21
    SOTOMAYOR, J., dissenting
    would instead grant it a degree of protection commensu­
    rate with the more robust state-law standards.14
    C
    The majority also protests that a contrary result to the
    one it reaches would interfere with the adoption of Indian
    children. Ante, at 14, 16. This claim is the most perplex­
    ing of all. A central purpose of ICWA is to “promote the
    stability and security of Indian . . . families,” 
    25 U. S. C. §1902
    , in part by countering the trend of placing “an
    alarmingly high percentage of [Indian] children . . . in non-
    Indian foster and adoptive homes and institutions.”
    §1901(4). The Act accomplishes this goal by, first, protect­
    ing the familial bonds of Indian parents and children, see
    supra, at 4–12; and, second, establishing placement pref­
    erences should an adoption take place, see §1915(a).
    ICWA does not interfere with the adoption of Indian chil­
    dren except to the extent that it attempts to avert the
    necessity of adoptive placement and makes adoptions of
    Indian children by non-Indian families less likely.
    The majority may consider this scheme unwise. But
    no principle of construction licenses a court to interpret a
    statute with a view to averting the very consequences
    Congress expressly stated it was trying to bring about.
    Instead, it is the “ ‘judicial duty to give faithful meaning to
    ——————
    14 It bears emphasizing that the ICWA standard for termination of
    parental rights of which Birth Father claims the benefit is more protec­
    tive than, but not out of step with, the clear and convincing standard
    generally applied in state courts when termination of parental rights
    is sought. Birth Father does not claim that he is entitled to custody
    of Baby Girl unless petitioners can satisfy the demanding standard of
    §1912(f ). See Brief for Respondent Birth Father 40, n. 15. The ques­
    tion of custody would be analyzed independently, as it was by the South
    Carolina Supreme Court. Of course, it will often be the case that cus­
    tody is subsequently granted to a child’s fit parent, consistent with
    the presumption that a natural parent will act in the best interests of
    his child. See supra, at 19–20.
    22              ADOPTIVE COUPLE v. BABY GIRL
    SOTOMAYOR, J., dissenting
    the language Congress adopted in the light of the evi-
    dent legislative purpose in enacting the law in question.’ ”
    Graham County Soil and Water Conservation Dist. v.
    United States ex rel. Wilson, 
    559 U. S. 280
    , 298 (2010)
    (quoting United States v. Bornstein, 
    423 U. S. 303
    , 310
    (1976)).
    The majority further claims that its reading is con­
    sistent with the “primary” purpose of the Act, which in the
    majority’s view was to prevent the dissolution of “intact”
    Indian families. Ante, at 9–10. We may not, however, give
    effect only to congressional goals we designate “primary”
    while casting aside others classed as “secondary”; we must
    apply the entire statute Congress has written. While there
    are indications that central among Congress’ concerns
    in enacting ICWA was the removal of Indian children
    from homes in which Indian parents or other guardians
    had custody of them, see, e.g., §§1901(4), 1902, Con-
    gress also recognized that “there is no resource that is
    more vital to the continued existence and integrity of
    Indian tribes than their children,” §1901(3). As we ob­
    served in Holyfield, ICWA protects not only Indian par­
    ents’ interests but also those of Indian tribes. See 490
    U. S., at 34, 52. A tribe’s interest in its next generation of
    citizens is adversely affected by the placement of Indian
    children in homes with no connection to the tribe, whether
    or not those children were initially in the custody of an
    Indian parent.15
    Moreover, the majority’s focus on “intact” families, ante,
    at 10, begs the question of what Congress set out to ac­
    complish with ICWA. In an ideal world, perhaps all
    parents would be perfect. They would live up to their
    ——————
    15 BirthFather is a registered member of the Cherokee Nation, a fact
    of which Birth Mother was aware at the time of her pregnancy and of
    which she informed her attorney. See 398 S. C. 625, 632–633, 
    731 S. E. 2d 550
    , 554 (2012).
    Cite as: 570 U. S. ____ (2013)                 23
    SOTOMAYOR, J., dissenting
    parental responsibilities by providing the fullest possible
    financial and emotional support to their children. They
    would never suffer mental health problems, lose their jobs,
    struggle with substance dependency, or encounter any of
    the other multitudinous personal crises that can make it
    difficult to meet these responsibilities. In an ideal world
    parents would never become estranged and leave their
    children caught in the middle. But we do not live in
    such a world. Even happy families do not always fit the
    custodial-parent mold for which the majority would reserve
    IWCA’s substantive protections; unhappy families all too
    often do not. They are families nonetheless. Congress
    understood as much. ICWA’s definitions of “parent” and
    “termination of parental rights” provided in §1903 sweep
    broadly. They should be honored.
    D
    The majority does not rely on the theory pressed by
    petitioners and the guardian ad litem that the canon of
    constitutional avoidance compels the conclusion that ICWA
    is inapplicable here. See Brief for Petitioners 43–51;
    Brief for Respondent Guardian Ad Litem 48–58. It
    states instead that it finds the statute clear.16 Ante, at 17.
    But the majority nevertheless offers the suggestion that a
    contrary result would create an equal protection problem.
    Ibid. Cf. Brief for Petitioners 44–47; Brief for Respondent
    ——————
    16 JUSTICE THOMAS concurs in the majority’s interpretation because,
    although he finds the statute susceptible of more than one plausible
    reading, he believes that the majority’s reading avoids “significant
    constitutional problems” concerning whether ICWA exceeds Congress’
    authority under the Indian Commerce Clause. Ante, at 1, 3–12. No
    party advanced this argument, and it is inconsistent with this Court’s
    precedents holding that Congress has “broad general powers to leg-
    islate in respect to Indian tribes, powers that we have consistently
    described as plenary and exclusive,” founded not only on the Indian
    Commerce Clause but also the Treaty Clause. United States v. Lara,
    
    541 U. S. 193
    , 200–201 (2004) (internal quotation marks omitted).
    24             ADOPTIVE COUPLE v. BABY GIRL
    SOTOMAYOR, J., dissenting
    Guardian Ad Litem 53–55.
    It is difficult to make sense of this suggestion in light of
    our precedents, which squarely hold that classifications
    based on Indian tribal membership are not impermissible
    racial classifications. See United States v. Antelope, 
    430 U. S. 641
    , 645–647 (1977); Morton v. Mancari, 
    417 U. S. 535
    , 553–554 (1974). The majority’s repeated, analytically
    unnecessary references to the fact that Baby Girl is 3/256
    Cherokee by ancestry do nothing to elucidate its intima­
    tion that the statute may violate the Equal Protection
    Clause as applied here. See ante, at 1, 6; see also ante,
    at 16 (stating that ICWA “would put certain vulner-
    able children at a great disadvantage solely because an
    ancestor—even a remote one—was an Indian” (emphasis
    added)). I see no ground for this Court to second-guess the
    membership requirements of federally recognized Indian
    tribes, which are independent political entities. See Santa
    Clara Pueblo v. Martinez, 
    436 U. S. 49
    , 72, n. 32 (1978).
    I am particularly averse to doing so when the Federal
    Government requires Indian tribes, as a prerequisite for
    official recognition, to make “descen[t] from a historical
    Indian tribe” a condition of membership. 
    25 CFR §83.7
    (e)
    (2012).
    The majority’s treatment of this issue, in the end, does
    no more than create a lingering mood of disapprobation of
    the criteria for membership adopted by the Cherokee
    Nation that, in turn, make Baby Girl an “Indian child”
    under the statute. Its hints at lurking constitutional
    problems are, by its own account, irrelevant to its statutory
    analysis, and accordingly need not detain us any longer.
    III
    Because I would affirm the South Carolina Supreme
    Court on the ground that §1912 bars the termination of
    Birth Father’s parental rights, I would not reach the
    question of the applicability of the adoptive placement
    Cite as: 570 U. S. ____ (2013)           25
    SOTOMAYOR, J., dissenting
    preferences of §1915. I note, however, that the majority
    does not and cannot foreclose the possibility that on re­
    mand, Baby Girl’s paternal grandparents or other mem­
    bers of the Cherokee Nation may formally petition for
    adoption of Baby Girl. If these parties do so, and if on
    remand Birth Father’s parental rights are terminated so
    that an adoption becomes possible, they will then be enti­
    tled to consideration under the order of preference estab­
    lished in §1915. The majority cannot rule prospectively
    that §1915 would not apply to an adoption petition that
    has not yet been filed. Indeed, the statute applies “[i]n
    any adoptive placement of an Indian child under State
    law,” 
    25 U. S. C. §1915
    (a) (emphasis added), and contains
    no temporal qualifications. It would indeed be an odd
    result for this Court, in the name of the child’s best in-
    terests, cf. ante, at 15, to purport to exclude from the pro­
    ceedings possible custodians for Baby Girl, such as her
    paternal grandparents, who may have well-established
    relationships with her.
    *    *    *
    The majority opinion turns §1912 upside down, reading
    it from bottom to top in order to reach a conclusion that is
    manifestly contrary to Congress’ express purpose in enact­
    ing ICWA: preserving the familial bonds between Indian
    parents and their children and, more broadly, Indian
    tribes’ relationships with the future citizens who are “vital
    to [their] continued existence and integrity.” §1901(3).
    The majority casts Birth Father as responsible for the
    painful circumstances in this case, suggesting that he
    intervened “at the eleventh hour to override the mother’s
    decision and the child’s best interests,” ante, at 16. I have
    no wish to minimize the trauma of removing a 27-month­
    old child from her adoptive family. It bears remembering,
    however, that Birth Father took action to assert his paren­
    tal rights when Baby Girl was four months old, as soon as
    26            ADOPTIVE COUPLE v. BABY GIRL
    SOTOMAYOR, J., dissenting
    he learned of the impending adoption. As the South Caro­
    lina Supreme Court recognized, “ ‘[h]ad the mandate of . . .
    ICWA been followed [in 2010], . . . much potential anguish
    might have been avoided[;] and in any case the law cannot
    be applied so as automatically to “reward those who obtain
    custody, whether lawfully or otherwise, and maintain it
    during any ensuing (and protracted) litigation.” ’ ” 398
    S. C., at 652, 731 S. E. 2d, at 564 (quoting Holyfield, 
    490 U. S., at
    53–54).
    The majority’s hollow literalism distorts the statute and
    ignores Congress’ purpose in order to rectify a perceived
    wrong that, while heartbreaking at the time, was a correct
    application of federal law and that in any case cannot be
    undone. Baby Girl has now resided with her father for 18
    months. However difficult it must have been for her to
    leave Adoptive Couple’s home when she was just over 2
    years old, it will be equally devastating now if, at the age
    of 3½, she is again removed from her home and sent to live
    halfway across the country. Such a fate is not foreor­
    dained, of course. But it can be said with certainty that
    the anguish this case has caused will only be compounded
    by today’s decision.
    I believe that the South Carolina Supreme Court’s
    judgment was correct, and I would affirm it. I respectfully
    dissent.