Shared parenting in Malaysia and Australia: an overview

Issue on ‘welfare of the child’ has been highlighted in many international conventions, charters and others. Thus, shared parenting has also been agreed to be the best method in protecting welfare of the child. Whereas, in Islamic law, though there is no specific provision on shared parenting, it is...

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Main Authors: Ali, Suzana, Che Soh @ Yusoff, Roslina
Format: Conference or Workshop Item
Language:English
Published: 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://irep.iium.edu.my/43181/
http://irep.iium.edu.my/43181/
http://irep.iium.edu.my/43181/1/Shared_parenting_in_Malaysia.pdf
id iium-43181
recordtype eprints
spelling iium-431812015-05-29T07:42:42Z http://irep.iium.edu.my/43181/ Shared parenting in Malaysia and Australia: an overview Ali, Suzana Che Soh @ Yusoff, Roslina KPG Malaysia Issue on ‘welfare of the child’ has been highlighted in many international conventions, charters and others. Thus, shared parenting has also been agreed to be the best method in protecting welfare of the child. Whereas, in Islamic law, though there is no specific provision on shared parenting, it is well understood that both parents should have good agreement in matters relating to their children. In Malaysia, the legislations on child custody emphasize that welfare of the child shall be the paramount consideration but they do not have any provisions on shared parenting and specific guidelines on its implementation and application. Amendment was made to the laws to include a provision of equal parental rights but it does not directly relate to the principle of shared parenting. The vagueness of the laws and the absence of the proper guidelines in relation to shared parenting open the doors for the courts to have inconsistent decisions in determining custodial rights and often decide in favour of sole custody. The absence of specific laws on shared parenting has also caused difficulties for the parents to cooperate for the sake of the children. They always stress on their conflicts and fighting for their rights rather than to focus on the welfare of the children. This paper seeks to discuss the current position of shared parenting after marital separation in Malaysia. As Malaysia practises dual legal systems, this paper will examine the suitability of the shared parenting principle to be applied in both systems. A brief comparative review will also be made to Australia which is more develop in the laws and policies on shared parenting. Finally, the paper will provide comments and suggestions to improve the currents law in Malaysia. Doctrinal methodology is used in this paper in arriving at the findings of the work. 2015 Conference or Workshop Item PeerReviewed application/pdf en http://irep.iium.edu.my/43181/1/Shared_parenting_in_Malaysia.pdf Ali, Suzana and Che Soh @ Yusoff, Roslina (2015) Shared parenting in Malaysia and Australia: an overview. In: 4th International Conference on Law & Society (ICLAS IV) 2015 , 10th-11th May 2015, Auditorium, Academic Building (UniSZA), Kuala Trengganu. http://www.unisza.edu.my/iclas2015/index.php?option=com_content&view=featured&Itemid=101
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Local University
institution International Islamic University Malaysia
building IIUM Repository
collection Online Access
language English
topic KPG Malaysia
spellingShingle KPG Malaysia
Ali, Suzana
Che Soh @ Yusoff, Roslina
Shared parenting in Malaysia and Australia: an overview
description Issue on ‘welfare of the child’ has been highlighted in many international conventions, charters and others. Thus, shared parenting has also been agreed to be the best method in protecting welfare of the child. Whereas, in Islamic law, though there is no specific provision on shared parenting, it is well understood that both parents should have good agreement in matters relating to their children. In Malaysia, the legislations on child custody emphasize that welfare of the child shall be the paramount consideration but they do not have any provisions on shared parenting and specific guidelines on its implementation and application. Amendment was made to the laws to include a provision of equal parental rights but it does not directly relate to the principle of shared parenting. The vagueness of the laws and the absence of the proper guidelines in relation to shared parenting open the doors for the courts to have inconsistent decisions in determining custodial rights and often decide in favour of sole custody. The absence of specific laws on shared parenting has also caused difficulties for the parents to cooperate for the sake of the children. They always stress on their conflicts and fighting for their rights rather than to focus on the welfare of the children. This paper seeks to discuss the current position of shared parenting after marital separation in Malaysia. As Malaysia practises dual legal systems, this paper will examine the suitability of the shared parenting principle to be applied in both systems. A brief comparative review will also be made to Australia which is more develop in the laws and policies on shared parenting. Finally, the paper will provide comments and suggestions to improve the currents law in Malaysia. Doctrinal methodology is used in this paper in arriving at the findings of the work.
format Conference or Workshop Item
author Ali, Suzana
Che Soh @ Yusoff, Roslina
author_facet Ali, Suzana
Che Soh @ Yusoff, Roslina
author_sort Ali, Suzana
title Shared parenting in Malaysia and Australia: an overview
title_short Shared parenting in Malaysia and Australia: an overview
title_full Shared parenting in Malaysia and Australia: an overview
title_fullStr Shared parenting in Malaysia and Australia: an overview
title_full_unstemmed Shared parenting in Malaysia and Australia: an overview
title_sort shared parenting in malaysia and australia: an overview
publishDate 2015
url http://irep.iium.edu.my/43181/
http://irep.iium.edu.my/43181/
http://irep.iium.edu.my/43181/1/Shared_parenting_in_Malaysia.pdf
first_indexed 2023-09-18T21:01:32Z
last_indexed 2023-09-18T21:01:32Z
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