The Politics of Clerical Sexual Abuse

Journal Title: Religions - Year 2016, Vol 7, Issue 1

Abstract

This article examines the complex politics surrounding the Catholic Bishops’ responses to clerical sexual abuse in the United States from the first, public revelations of the scandal in Boston in 2002 to the present. It asks a compelling leadership question on three levels: how did the Bishops respond politically as individual diocesan leaders; as members of their canonical organization, the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB); and as appointed officials of the Vatican? This article argues that the members of the hierarchy implemented disparate and often conflicting religious and legal responses to clerical sexual abuse in their various roles. They did this by accepting misguided psychological advice, relying on traditional religious exemptions, attempting to implement confusing institutional policies, and usually mounting ineffective legal challenges to canon law in civil courts. These actions reflected hierarchical ignorance and arrogance as well as a political underestimation of the compelling state interest to protect the safety of children over religious concerns to insure the autonomy of the Church.

Authors and Affiliations

o Renee Formicola

Keywords

Related Articles

Charisma, Diversity, and Religion in the American City— A Reflection

The faith leaders of North American cities actively engage in the civic affairs of their urban communities. Religious leadership, charismatic preaching, and, possibly, reputation of prophetic powers, continue to play i...

Do Religious Struggles Mediate the Association between Day-to-Day Discrimination and Depressive Symptoms?

Although numerous studies have shown that discrimination contributes to poorer mental health, the precise mechanisms underlying this association are not well understood. In this paper, we consider the possibility that...

God’s Presence within Henry’s Phenomenology of Life: The Phenomenological Revelation of God in Opposition to Plantinga’s Affirmation of God’s Existence

The recent debate on the notorious Anselmian proof of God’s existence, usually called the “ontological argument”, is placed within an analytic approach, since Alvin Plantinga revisited this argument beginning in the si...

Mothers and Spirits: Religious Identity, Alcohol, and Death

Mothers and Spirits examines the intersection of women, alcohol, and death through a comparative analysis. Offering a brief history of the study of drinking, followed by a short analysis of drinking in European and Chi...

Religion and Family Life: An Overview of Current Research and Suggestions for Future Research

The primary aim of this paper is to offer an overview of current research into the relationship between religion and family life and to offer suggestions for future research. In order to do this, the paper distinguishe...

Download PDF file
  • EP ID EP25506
  • DOI https://doi.org/10.3390/rel7010009
  • Views 318
  • Downloads 12

How To Cite

o Renee Formicola (2016). The Politics of Clerical Sexual Abuse. Religions, 7(1), -. https://europub.co.uk/articles/-A-25506