Where a child's mother and father are married to each other at the time of the child's birth or subsequently marry, they will both have Parental Responsibility for the child. They can only lose their Parental Responsibility if the child is adopted (or in some very exceptional cases of assisted reproduction). Parents who separate or divorce continue to have Parental Responsibility.
When parents were not married at the time of birth:
- The mother has Parental Responsibility for the child
The father does not have it, unless he acquires it by:
marrying the mother; - being registered on the birth certificate (but only if registered after the Law comes into effect);
- entering into a Parental Responsibility agreement with the mother in the prescribed form;
- if the court makes a Parental Responsibility order or residence order to him.
Adoptive parents obtain Parental Responsibility in place of birth parents, by virtue of the adoption order.
Guardians appointed on the death of a parent acquire Parental Responsibility for a child.
Other individuals e.g. relatives or step-parents can acquire Parental Responsibility by virtue of certain court orders e.g. a Residence Order or Parental Responsibility order.
The Committee can acquire Parental Responsibility by virtue of a community parenting order , an emergency child protection order , a care requirement (so far as necessary to fulfil the terms and conditions of the care requirement) and a secure accommodation order, orders made prior to the new law i.e. a Fit Person Order or Special Care Orders.