Intercountry adoption and the South African child's right to culture
Abstract
For a long time, South African children have been preferred for inter-country adoption
over in-country adoption or local alternative child-welfare systems. The child's cultural
right has often been interpreted to be subsidiary to the best interest of the child in
inter-country adoption. South Africa has ratified The Hague Convention on the
Protection of Children and Cooperation in Respect of Intercountry Adoption, the
Convention on the Rights of the Child and the African Charter on the Rights and
Welfare of the Child and yet all these international instruments have different views
on when inter-country adoption may be applied. The South African courts have tilted
more towards having children leaving the country as opposed to them staying within
the country. The courts have gravitated towards adhering to The Hague Convention's
interpretation of the child's best interest as opposed to the ACRWC. This paper states
that a child's right to culture has not been adequately addressed by South African
courts when it comes to inter-country adoption.
From colonial to present times, the African traditional value system has been side-lined to the margins of justice. Therefore, there is a need for a new socio-legal discourse
that takes a child’s cultural rights seriously and this would be to interpret the child's
best interest from the ACRWC 's point of view. This is mainly because inter-country
adoption and the best interest of the child has for a long time been applied from an
international perspective that encompasses a western perspective that is reflective of
western liberalism which does not prioritise children's cultural rights. Therefore, there
is a need for African values and standards to receive universal recognition as well.
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