This book is an extraordinary and scholarly re-envisioning of what it means to be a father in our modern, complex world. Drawing on an interdisciplinary array of research, the book explores the neurobiology of care, attachment theory, systems thinking, intersectionality, and the lived realities of fathers across diverse cultural, economic, and political contexts. Richly analytical yet practically resonant, this book challenges outdated paradigms and establishes a new canon for understanding contemporary fatherhood.