Transparency as a means to rebuild trust within the Church: a case study in how Catholic dioceses and eparchies in the United States have responded to the clergy sex abuse crisis

The United States comprises 197 dioceses and eparchies. With the sexual abuse crisis affecting every one of those dioceses in some way, the clarion call from the laity and media for transparency within the Church became deafening. In the midst of this crisis and the calls for more transparency, a ce...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Patrick M. O’Brien
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2020-09-01
Series:Church, Communication and Culture
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23753234.2020.1827962
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spelling doaj-d0703a3d36df4452bd8a898923661d2f2021-06-02T10:12:15ZengTaylor & Francis GroupChurch, Communication and Culture2375-32342375-32422020-09-015345648310.1080/23753234.2020.18279621827962Transparency as a means to rebuild trust within the Church: a case study in how Catholic dioceses and eparchies in the United States have responded to the clergy sex abuse crisisPatrick M. O’Brien0FAITH CatholicThe United States comprises 197 dioceses and eparchies. With the sexual abuse crisis affecting every one of those dioceses in some way, the clarion call from the laity and media for transparency within the Church became deafening. In the midst of this crisis and the calls for more transparency, a central question arose: how transparent are U.S. dioceses about their handling of clergy sexual abuse? This led to further questions regarding how many dioceses have had a review of clergy files and released the names of clergy abusers; how many make it easy to report abuse; and how many have a complete online resource as their response. At the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) fall 2018 meeting, the chair of the National Review Board (NRB), Francesco Cesareo, Ph.D., offered five key recommendations to increase accountability and transparency. In light of these recommendations, FAITH Catholic researchers reviewed and analyzed what steps U.S. dioceses are taking to achieve transparency. We concluded by developing criteria to enable diocesan leaders to understand more clearly what U.S. dioceses are already doing, or not yet doing, related to implementing those recommendations.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23753234.2020.1827962transparencycatholicclergyabusebishopscommunications
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Patrick M. O’Brien
spellingShingle Patrick M. O’Brien
Transparency as a means to rebuild trust within the Church: a case study in how Catholic dioceses and eparchies in the United States have responded to the clergy sex abuse crisis
Church, Communication and Culture
transparency
catholic
clergy
abuse
bishops
communications
author_facet Patrick M. O’Brien
author_sort Patrick M. O’Brien
title Transparency as a means to rebuild trust within the Church: a case study in how Catholic dioceses and eparchies in the United States have responded to the clergy sex abuse crisis
title_short Transparency as a means to rebuild trust within the Church: a case study in how Catholic dioceses and eparchies in the United States have responded to the clergy sex abuse crisis
title_full Transparency as a means to rebuild trust within the Church: a case study in how Catholic dioceses and eparchies in the United States have responded to the clergy sex abuse crisis
title_fullStr Transparency as a means to rebuild trust within the Church: a case study in how Catholic dioceses and eparchies in the United States have responded to the clergy sex abuse crisis
title_full_unstemmed Transparency as a means to rebuild trust within the Church: a case study in how Catholic dioceses and eparchies in the United States have responded to the clergy sex abuse crisis
title_sort transparency as a means to rebuild trust within the church: a case study in how catholic dioceses and eparchies in the united states have responded to the clergy sex abuse crisis
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Church, Communication and Culture
issn 2375-3234
2375-3242
publishDate 2020-09-01
description The United States comprises 197 dioceses and eparchies. With the sexual abuse crisis affecting every one of those dioceses in some way, the clarion call from the laity and media for transparency within the Church became deafening. In the midst of this crisis and the calls for more transparency, a central question arose: how transparent are U.S. dioceses about their handling of clergy sexual abuse? This led to further questions regarding how many dioceses have had a review of clergy files and released the names of clergy abusers; how many make it easy to report abuse; and how many have a complete online resource as their response. At the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) fall 2018 meeting, the chair of the National Review Board (NRB), Francesco Cesareo, Ph.D., offered five key recommendations to increase accountability and transparency. In light of these recommendations, FAITH Catholic researchers reviewed and analyzed what steps U.S. dioceses are taking to achieve transparency. We concluded by developing criteria to enable diocesan leaders to understand more clearly what U.S. dioceses are already doing, or not yet doing, related to implementing those recommendations.
topic transparency
catholic
clergy
abuse
bishops
communications
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23753234.2020.1827962
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