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Posted 17 February 2013

Clerical training fostered any predisposition to perpetrate child sexual abuse

The emotional and sexual development issues which likely predisposed some men who entered the seminary in Ireland to perpetrate child sexual abuse were exacerbated by the clerical training and culture they experienced, according to study findings published in the International Journal of Child Abuse & Neglect.

The research highlights that the prohibition of friendship and the promotion of sexuality as sinful served to compound and amplify psychological conflicts that had developed during the offender’s early life.

“What our research shows is a culture within the training of Irish Catholic priests that militated against the integration of emotional and sexual development and hindered psychological development, thus creating some men with very serious intimacy and relationship difficulties,” says the first author of the report, Dr Paul D’Alton, UCD School of Psychology, University College Dublin, and the Department of Psycho-oncology, St Vincent's University Hospital.

The study involved nine clergy who had perpetrated child sexual abuse and were attending professional psychotherapy.

The interview schedules with the offenders were taken from a thematic analysis of a random selection of ‘life stories’ (autobiographical accounts of participants’ life histories completed as part of group therapy).

All of the participants displayed critical issues around the formation of intimate relationships, a condition generally associated with perpetrators of child sexual abuse.

“What appears among our study participants, and therefore is likely for other clerical offenders, is the experience of a culture and system that failed to re-balance or correct any early problems they may have had but rather acted to compound them through the strict imposition of certain beliefs and ideology,” adds Dr D’Alton.

The findings published in The International Journal of Child Abuse and Neglect point to a prevailing ideology that compounded psychosexual and psychosocial vulnerabilities during the participants’ clerical training, and thus fostered any predisposition to perpetrate sexual abuse.

According to Dr D’Alton, the findings support other studies that have suggested unique factors associated with sexual abuse within the clerical environment.

The study shows a clear failure of the clerical training and culture to re-balance or resolve any psychological conflicts that had already developed during the offender’s early life.

 

(Produced by UCD University Relations)

 

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