ABSTRACT

This book offers an academically rigorous examination of the biological, psychological, social and ecclesiastical processes that allowed sexual abuse in the Catholic Church to happen and then be covered up. The collected essays provide a means to better assess systemic wrongdoing in religious institutions, so that they can be more effectively held to account.

An international team of contributors apply a necessarily multi-disciplinary approach to this difficult subject. Chapters look closely at the sexual abuse of minors by Roman Catholic clerics, explaining the complexity of this issue, which cannot be reduced to simple misconduct, sexual deviation, or a management failure alone. The book will help the reader to better understand the social, organizational, and cultural processes in the Church over recent decades, as well as the intricate world of beliefs, moral rules, and behaviours. It concludes with some strategies for change at the individual and corporate levels that will better ensure safeguarding within the Catholic Church and its affiliate institutions.  

This multifaceted study gives a nuanced analysis of this huge organizational failure and offers recommendations for effective ways of preventing it in the future. As such, it will be of keen interest to scholars of Religious Studies, Sociology of Religion, Psychology, Psychiatry, Legal Studies, Ethics, Anthropology, Cultural Studies, History, and Theology.

chapter |6 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|41 pages

Sexual abuse of young boys in the Roman Catholic Church

An insider clinician’s academic perspective

chapter 2|21 pages

Clerical abuses of minors and cultural context

Which link?

chapter 4|26 pages

Social networks and sexual abuse in the Catholic Church

When priests become pirates

chapter 8|22 pages

Sexual abuse of minors and clerical homosexuality

Comments on a puzzling correlation

chapter 9|4 pages

Conclusion

Trying to learn some lessons and correct past mistakes