ABSTRACT

Child sexual abuse by clergy within the Roman Catholic Church has emerged as a social and political discourse over the last three decades. The analysis here specifically focuses on the establishment, conduct, and outcomes of the extensive public inquiries of Australia, although inquiries in other jurisdictions are also discussed. Unlike criminal or civil processes, although they may be inquisitory in nature, public inquiries emerge from a specifically political context and are a tool of governance embedded in a larger context of governmentality. Understanding the broader political and cultural contexts of public inquiries is important, then, in understanding their value and effectiveness as justice processes – especially for victims of CSA by clergy. What is interesting about public inquiry is that it situates victims of CSA by clergy outside of criminal and civil justice processes and recognises a different politicised relationship between victims as citizens, the state, and Catholic institutions where abuse has occurred.

At the cutting edge of disciplinary and methodological understandings of the interconnections between the church, state and families, his book explores the dynamics of the emergence and politicisation of victims of CSA by clergy, their expressions of resistance and the legitimisation of their voice in public and political spheres.

chapter |15 pages

Prelude

chapter 1|16 pages

Victims of CSA as politicised subjects

chapter 2|15 pages

Recognising the ‘I’ in justice

Political subjects, public inquiry, and CSA

chapter 4|24 pages

Public inquiry as good governance

The case of the Christian Brothers of Western Australia

chapter 5|19 pages

Moderating responsibility

Responses of the RCC to public inquiry

chapter 6|11 pages

Public inquiry and discursive spaces

Future directions