000 01580nam a22001577a 4500
999 _c509624
_d509624
008 190516b ||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
100 _aGleeson, Kate
_95704
245 _aExceptional sexual harms: the catholic church and child sexual claims in Australia
260 _c2018
300 _ap.734-754.
520 _aQuestioning of Catholic Church leaders in the Australian Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse has revealed a distinct sense of immunity and lack of responsibility for the crimes of church personnel, which has resulted in stymied justice for complainants in sexual abuse lawsuits. In this article, I explore this immunity by examining it in the context of treatments of sexual harms in other areas of private law, particularly religious exceptions to discrimination law, by which religious organizations are granted immunity from the modern rationale of the harms of discrimination on the grounds of sex and sexual orientation. In situating child sexual abuse claims in the broader sphere of private law, I aim to reveal law’s incoherent logic of sexual harms, and its implications for justice. The example of religious exceptions illustrates an incoherent problematization of sexual harm and responsibility in contemporary legal and political systems that aim to uphold modern values of equality and dignity while sustaining incompatible doctrines of religious autonomy. - Reproduced.
650 _aSexual abuse - Australia
_95705
773 _aSocial and Legal Studies
906 _aChild abuse - Australia
942 _2ddc
_cAR