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Indian Journal of Modern Research and Reviews, 2025; 3(11):58-63

Co-Parenting After Separation: Socio-Legal Challenges and Opportunities in Protecting Children’s Rights

Authors: Mayurika Chauhan; Dr. Amit Verma;

1. Research Scholar, Teerthanker Mahaveer College of Law and Legal Studies, Teerthanker Mahaveer University, Moradabad, Uttar Pradesh, India

2. Associate Professor, Teerthanker Mahaveer College of Law and Legal Studies, Teerthanker Mahaveer University, Moradabad, Uttar Pradesh, India

Paper Type: Research Paper
Article Information
Received: 2025-09-11   |   Accepted: 2025-10-29   |   Published: 2025-11-30
Abstract

Parental separation and divorce are increasingly common in modern society and carry profound consequences for all parties involved—especially children. These disruptions often lead to emotional, psychological, and socio-legal challenges that hinder a child’s sense of stability, identity, and overall well-being. In traditional custody models, particularly in India, one parent (often the mother) is granted primary custody, while the other parent plays a limited role. This system has been criticised for marginalising one parent and failing to serve the child’s best interests, particularly when both parents are capable and willing to provide care and support. Co-parenting is emerging as a more balanced and child-centric alternative. Co-parenting refers to a post-separation parenting arrangement in which both parents continue to share legal and physical responsibilities for their child’s upbringing. This model not only protects the emotional needs of the child but also encourages cooperative parenting practices, mitigates adversarial custody disputes, and promotes gender neutrality in caregiving roles. This paper aims to examine the socio-legal challenges and opportunities associated with co-parenting in the Indian legal and cultural context. It critically evaluates existing personal and secular legal frameworks, the attitudes of family courts, societal norms, and the role of institutions such as the judiciary and child welfare bodies. Additionally, the paper compares international practices in jurisdictions like the US, UK, and Australia, where shared parenting laws are more mature and structured. This paper identifies critical gaps in Indian custody laws and makes policy recommendations aimed at institutionalising co-parenting as a norm rather than an exception. The paper recommends legislative reforms and provides suggestions in the best interests of the child.

Keywords

Co-Parenting, Children’s Rights, Divorce, Indian Judiciary, Shared Parenting, Legal Framework

How to Cite

. Co-Parenting After Separation: Socio-Legal Challenges and Opportunities in Protecting Children’s Rights. Indian Journal of Modern Research and Reviews. 2025; 3(11):58-63

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