$37
Children in a community of care are, in a meaningful sense, part of the community — cared for by many adults, shaped by shared culture, present in shared spaces. And yet: parental authority is real, legal, and psychologically important. Children need clear primary attachments and a coherent set of expectations that don't conflict across caregivers.
These two realities — community investment in children and parental authority over children — create ongoing tension that communities of care handle badly unless they address it explicitly. The default outcome, without explicit structure, is usually one of two failure modes:
Under-involvement: The community treats children as entirely the parents' domain, offers no support, and non-parents feel unable to raise concerns even when they have legitimate ones.
Over-involvement: Community members feel entitled to parent each other's children, offer unsolicited parenting advice, and parents feel constantly surveilled and judged.
Neither serves children, parents, or the community. The goal is a middle position built on explicit agreements rather than implicit assumptions.
In community settings, non-parent adults have legitimate roles in relation to children — but those roles need to be understood and agreed upon, not improvised.
Safety interventions are always appropriate. Any adult in the community can and should intervene if a child is in immediate danger. This is not overstepping; it is basic care.
Behavioral guidance within community agreements is appropriate. If the community has agreed on behavioral norms in shared spaces — how food is handled, how noise is managed, how people treat each other — adults can uphold these norms with any child present. "In our community, we clean up after ourselves" is a community norm, not a parenting intervention.
Beyond safety and community norms, defer to parents. Discipline methods, bedtimes, screen time, food, clothing, education, medical decisions — these belong to the parents unless there is a specific agreement otherwise. Non-parent adults who override parents in these areas, even with the best intentions, undermine parental authority and the child's clarity about who is in charge.
A non-parent adult sees a child behaving in a way they would handle differently at home:
A child asks a non-parent for something the parent hasn't approved:
A child complains to a non-parent about their parent's decision:
When multiple families are living or parenting closely in community, explicit agreements about shared parenting responsibilities are far more functional than leaving it implicit.
Who can make what decisions without checking with parents:
How discipline-type situations are handled:
Communication between parents and community:
When a parent isn't available:
Do this proactively, not in reaction to a crisis. A community that only creates parenting agreements after a conflict will have agreements that are punitive and specific to that conflict.
Revisit agreements as children grow — the appropriate autonomy and community involvement for a three-year-old is different from what's appropriate for a twelve-year-old.
Communities of care often contain parents with genuinely different approaches: attachment parenting and more structured approaches, permissive and authoritative styles, different views on consequences, screen time, diet, physical autonomy. These differences become friction when:
Shared space, shared norms. Agreement on what happens in shared community spaces — regardless of what individual families do at home — is essential. This is not about imposing one philosophy; it's about having a coherent environment in the spaces everyone shares.
Private space, family norms. What individual families do in their private space is their business. Offering unsolicited opinions about another family's choices in their own space is not stewardship; it is intrusion.
When a child's experience at home affects their community behavior: This is the hard case. A child whose home environment is very permissive may struggle with community norms. A child with very strict expectations may show behavior in community that parents aren't aware of. The approach: observe without interpreting, share with the parent as information rather than criticism, and let the parent respond.
Explicit is better than implicit. "We don't use shame as a tool" or "we allow children to refuse physical affection from adults" are positions some families hold that others may not be aware of. When families are parenting closely together, naming your approach and your non-negotiables prevents most conflicts before they start.
Non-parent community members sometimes observe things about a child that concern them — behavioral changes, something the child said, an interaction they witnessed. How these concerns are raised determines whether they help or create a new conflict.
Approach the parent privately, not in a group. Start with care, not criticism:
Do not: raise it in community settings, discuss it with other non-parent adults before talking to the parent, or return to it repeatedly if the parent has responded.
These are harder. When you observe parenting that you believe is harmful to the child — even if it doesn't cross into abuse or neglect — this is among the most fraught interpersonal territories in community life.
Before raising it: Be honest with yourself about whether your concern is about the child's wellbeing or about your own discomfort with a different parenting style. Not all parenting you disagree with is harmful.
If it's genuine wellbeing concern: One private conversation with the parent, framed around what you observed and your care for the child: "I'm not sure how to say this, and I want to get it right because I care about all of you. I've noticed [specific behavior/interaction] and I wanted to check in about it."
If the parent becomes defensive: Leave the door open. "I understand. I just wanted to say something because I care. I'm here if you ever want to talk."
If you're not the only one with concerns: This needs coordination — not a pile-on, but also not silence. Bring it to a senior steward who can think with you about whether and how to raise it as a community concern.
This is different from everything above. If you have genuine reason to believe a child is being abused or neglected, this is not a community matter to resolve internally — it is a reporting obligation in most jurisdictions.
In close community, parents can experience the care and interest of community members as surveillance and judgment — even when it's offered with good intentions. This is a legitimate concern.
Signs a parent is feeling this way:
What helps: Affirm parental authority explicitly. "Your kid, your call" is not always the right framework, but saying it periodically reminds parents that the community trusts them. Reduce the frequency of unsolicited comments on parenting, even positive ones ("you're such a good mom" every time can reinforce the sense of being watched). Ask how they're doing as a parent — not just how the child is doing.
The specific challenge of single parents in community: Single parents may experience community involvement as simultaneous support and judgment more acutely. Their need for both (help, because they're doing this without a co-parent; autonomy, because they're carrying it all) may be in tension. Follow their lead about what they need in any given moment.
Children in community are shaped by the community — by the adults they spend time with, the culture they're immersed in, the values they observe enacted. This is one of the gifts of community life. It is also a responsibility.
Non-parent community members are part of how children learn what adults are like, how conflict is handled, what care looks like, and what is valued. This is not license to parent children who aren't yours — it is a reminder that your behavior in community is always, in some sense, a contribution to the children's formation.
The community can offer children:
What children need from this: consistency, predictability, and the experience that the adults in their lives are, broadly speaking, on the same team.
For the child's experience and developmental needs, invoke the youth-development skill. For responding to a child in distress or dysregulation, invoke the trauma-informed-child-care skill. For significant conflicts between parents about parenting, invoke the restorative-justice or conflict-prevention skill.