Parental Rights in Arkansas

Arkansas State Law

Not Explicitly Defined and Protected

Arkansas does not have a state statute that explicitly defines and protects parental rights as fundamental rights.

Arkansas does have various laws on the books that are supportive of parental rights.

Don't Miss a Critical Issue!

Be sure to sign up for our newsletter to keep posted on parental rights in both your state and nationwide. Through our volunteer network, we monitor the law in all the states. We then pass on important updates and action items.

Arkansas Courts

Yes!Affirmed

Parental rights are affirmed in Arkansas Supreme Court case precedent as a fundamental right for which strict scrutiny must be applied.

Additional case law precedent includes:

  • In Graham v. Matheny, 346 S.W.3d 273 (Ark. 2009), the Chief Justice of the Arkansas Supreme Court wrote a footnote in his concurring opinion in which he stated that the "judicial question of what is best for welfare of child never arises unless the parents are dead or declared unfit" and that "the law establishes a preference for the natural parent and that preference must prevail unless it is established that the natural parent is unfit." Id. at 282.
  • In re Guardianship of S.H., __ S.W.3d __ (Ark. 2012), the Court held that a "natural parent who has not been deemed unfit is entitled to the presumption that he or she is acting in the child's best interest, even after consenting to a guardianship."
  • Coffee v. Zolliecoffer, 216 S.W.3d 636 (Ark. Ct. App. 2005): "The law prefers a parent over a grandparent or other third person, unless the parent is proved to be incompetent or unfit." Id. at 641. However, "the 'polestar' and paramount consideration is at all times the best interest of the child, which can overcome the parental preference when a child is left in the care of a non-parent for a substantial period of time," id. at 642, even when the parent is perfectly fit.
  • In Bethany v. Jones, 378 S.W. 3d 731 (Ark. 2011), the Arkansas Supreme Court affirmed a judgment awarding visitation to a former same-sex partner over the objections of the mother. Even though there had been no showing of parental unfitness, the Court noted that the mother's former partner was a "parent figure" to her daughter.