Demographers frame international adoption primarily as an unusual kind of migration. This insight offers anthropologists new ways to think about kinship. Drawing on demographic scholarship and anthropological kinship and migration studies, this article develops a new and hybrid approach to international adoption as a complex social process that is both migratory and productive of kinship. Viewing international adoption as a form of migration reveals how the stated "push factors" and actual "pull factors" of international adoption do not align perfectly. Using an anthropological life course perspective, the article then explores how the experiences of these "migrants" and those close to them, over time, are better understood as racialization than solely the product of migration. Looking at adoptees' lives through a migration lens reveals some of the persistent discomforts that prevent open conversations about racial difference and minority status in an adoptive context, that is, one where children have been caused to migrate, recruited into families. This article draws on data from ethnographic fieldwork with Spanish parents who have adopted Peruvian children to argue that international adoption is a unique form of immigration that produces a minority category within a majority population. Keywords adoption; demography; migration; kinship; Spain Demographers take an intriguing tack when analyzing international adoption, one which is productive and revealing for anthropologists studying kinship. They write about it primarily as an unusual kind of migration. i As a discipline, demography is broadly concerned with changes in population size and age structure of countries and, therefore, focuses on birth, death, and migration. Of these three key demographic processes, international adoption most closely resembles migration, because children have entered a nation by land or air rather than through a birth canal. To put it simply, one country's population is decreased by one, while another's is increased by one -this is the stuff of migration. ii This consistent focus in the demographic approach raises the question of what anthropologists might be missing by not analyzing international adoption primarily as a form of migration. iii