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Child custody challenges amid cultural differences: A global perspective

Migration for job purposes is not a new phenomenon; it’s an age-old practice. Migration within a country is not an issue, as you will be guided by your lex loci. However, when you migrate to other countries, many problems and legal issues arise. Not only does the change of culture bring challenges, but traditions also […]

Migration for job purposes is not a new phenomenon; it’s an age-old practice. Migration within a country is not an issue, as you will be guided by your lex loci. However, when you migrate to other countries, many problems and legal issues arise. Not only does the change of culture bring challenges, but traditions also become a social issue that everyone faces when migrating to other countries. Today, we are highlighting one such social and legal issue: parenting differences. It has become challenging for Asian parents to manage their parenting traditions in European countries.

In recent times, the topic of taking custody of children away from their parents by authorities has caught the attention of the media, world leaders, and other platforms. We also find that this issue is being discussed. In India, this issue first came into the limelight when a Bengali couple named Sagarika Chakraborty and Anurup Bhattacharya lost custody of their children to the authorities in Norway on account of poor parenting. The Norwegian Government alleged that “Mrs. Chatterjee” fed her kids using her hands, which was considered forced feeding and improper parenting. In the year 2011, Barnevernet, an agency for child protection in Norway, took custody of both their children and placed them in a foster home. Barnevernet, which had the family under observation, stated that the couple had beaten the children, which constituted corporal punishment. These activities, commonly used for rearing children in Indian tradition, were in conflict with Norway’s strict laws for child protection. The cultural differences between these two countries did not deter the Norwegian government from taking these harsh steps. This story was also depicted on the silver screen in a movie titled “Mrs. Chatterjee vs Norway,” where the role of Sagarika was played by the famous actress Rani Mukherjee. Similar instances have been witnessed in Germany, where a Gujarati couple lost custody of their child to German authorities. In this case, the Ministry of External Affairs of India had to intervene and make efforts, but due to legal constraints, the issue remains unresolved. In Australia, there was also the tragic suicide of a mother named Mrs. Patil, whose children were confiscated by Australian child protection services.

For every parent and child, parenting is a unique and adventurous journey, and parenting practices vary within the same family and differ significantly across countries and cultures. For example, it’s acceptable for parents in Japan to allow their children as young as 7 years old to commute on trains and buses on their own, which is almost unthinkable in India. Researchers have identified three major factors affecting parenting styles: how parents show affection to their children, the level of control they exert, and the degree to which they provide a predictable and consistent environment for their children to grow up in.
Let’s take a look at some interesting parenting styles from around the world. In Norway, Sweden, and Denmark, babies are often allowed to nap in their strollers outside coffee shops or restaurants due to the high level of street safety. This is a practice that we can hardly imagine in India or other Asian countries. In China and Vietnam, potty training starts for children when they are just 9 months old, which is not common in India.

Similarly, in South Korea and France, eating is a social experience meant to be enjoyed with the family, whereas in India, we tend to fix meals for our children if they are hungry before sitting down for lunch or dinner. In Finland, children spend less time in school and more time outdoors, and corporal punishment is banned in Sweden.

Children who are removed from their parents and placed in foster care in foreign countries often face challenges. They are often very young, unfamiliar with the local language and culture, and taken from an environment that closely resembles their home in India. However, they are placed with foster caregivers who have no ethnic or cultural links with the child. This issue is not unique to India and affects expatriate families from other countries as well.

India has the world’s largest diaspora, with 32 million expatriates, and over a million citizens going abroad for work each year. The idea of “Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam” (the world is one family) is becoming a lived experience for these expatriate diaspora families. Today, there is an urgent need for the international community to develop a protocol for the repatriation of children removed from their parents by foreign child services. The fate of these children should not be determined solely on a technical and jurisdictional basis, though we must respect foreign legal systems when they believe children are in danger or victims of child abuse. The child’s fundamental humanity must come first, and their ethnic background should not be disregarded.

According to the judges’ letter, these Indian expatriate children were taken from their parents’ care due to “grounds of abuse, neglect, or harm” and placed with foster caregivers who were native to the country of residence and had no ties to the child’s home culture. Consequently, these children lose their identity and are unable to form relationships with their extended relatives or their place of origin. They age out of foster care in a state of dual alienation—they are not citizens of the country of residence and have no substantial ties with their country of origin.

The hope for the future is that when global leaders meet in international summits, they should prioritize discussing this issue, which is directly connected to humanitarian values. This way, no mother, like Mrs. Patil, should feel compelled to take steps towards suicide out of love for their children.

Sashank Sekhar Dayal is an Assistant Professor in the Faculty of Arts, and Dr. Pyali Chatterjee is HOD in the Faculty of Law at ICFAI University, Raipur, Chhattisgarh

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