Child Sexual Abuse and the Catholic Church: Gender, Power, and Organizational Culture by Marie Keenan (July 2013)

Jul 18, 2014 | 1 comment

Child Sexual Abuse and the Catholic Church_Marie Keenan

A meticulously researched inside look at child sexual abuse by clergy, this exhaustive, hard-hitting analysis weaves together interviews with abusive priests and church historical and administrative details to propose a new way of thinking about clerical sexual offenders. Linking the personal and the institutional, researcher and therapist Marie Keenan locates the problem of child sexual abuse not exclusively in individual pathology, but also within larger systemic factors, such as the very institution of priesthood itself, the Catholic take on sexuality, clerical culture, power relations, governance structures of the Catholic Church, the process of formation for priesthood and religious life, and the complex manner in which these factors coalesce to create serious institutional risks for boundary violations, including child sexual abuse. Keenan draws on the priests’ own words not to excuse their horrific crimes, but to offer the first in-depth account of a tragic, multi-faceted phenomenon.

What emerges is a troubling portrait of a Church in crisis and a series of recommendations that call for nothing less than a new ecclesiology and a new, more critical theology. Only through radical institutional reform, Keenan argues, can a more representative and accountable Church emerge.

Child Sexual Abuse and the Catholic Church is a unique reference for scholars of the Church and therapists who work with both victims and offenders, as well as a forward-thinking blueprint for reform.

 

Paperback: 388 pages
Publisher: OUP USA; 1 edition (20 July 2013)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0199328978
ISBN-13: 978-0199328970

 

About the Author 
Marie Keenan is a Researcher and Lecturer at the School of Applied Social Science, University College Dublin, and a member of the Advisory Board of the UCD Institute of Criminology. She is Chairperson of the Family Therapy Association of Ireland and a registered psychotherapist who has worked for over twenty years with survivors and perpetrators of sexual crime and their families, in community and forensic settings.

Buy:  here

Read a Book Review (Dr Gladys Ganiel, ISE):   Part 1,    Part 2,   Part 3,   Part 4

 

1 Comment

  1. Martin Murray

    Apart from the book, the four part review itself really gets below the surface to the deep roots of the problem in a way I haven’t seen before – and not just in relation to Clerical Child Sexual Abuse, but of all the issues facing the Catholic Church at this time.

    Reply

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