Abstract

The Australian Royal Commission Into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse has identified multiple systemic failures to protect children in government and non-government organizations providing educational, religious, welfare, sporting, cultural, arts and recreational activities. Its recommendations for reform will aim to ensure organizations adopt more effective and ethical measures to prevent, identify and respond to child sexual abuse. However, apart from the question of what measures institutions should adopt, an under-explored question is how to implement and regulate those measures. Major challenges confronting reform include the diversity of organizations providing services to children; organizational resistance; and the need for effective oversight. Failure to adopt theoretically sound strategies to overcome implementation barriers will jeopardize reform and compromise reduction of institutional child sexual abuse. This article first explains the nature of the Royal Commission, and focuses on key findings from case studies and data analysis. It then analyzes public health theory and regulatory theory to present a novel analysis of theoretically justified approaches to the implementation of measures to prevent, identify and respond to CSA, while isolating challenges to implementation. The article reviews literature on challenges to reform and compliance, and on prevention of institutional CSA and situational crime prevention, to identify measures which have attracted emerging consensus as recommended practice. Finally, it applies its novel integration of regulatory theory and public health theory to the context of CSA in institutional contexts, to develop a theoretical basis for a model of implementation and regulation, and to indicate the nature and functions of a regulatory body for this context.

Highlights

  • Child sexual abuse (CSA) often causes myriad serious consequences to health, behaviour and functioning (Chen et al, 2010; Dube et al, 2005)

  • Australia’s Royal Commission Into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse was initiated on 12 November 2012 by the Prime Minister of Australia, Julia Gillard, due to growing concern about the prevalence of child sexual abuse within public and private institutional contexts, the inadequacy of preventative and responsive measures undertaken by institutions, and active concealment of such abuse by institutions including the Catholic Church (Australian Government, 2013; Australian Government Royal Commission Into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse, 2014)

  • “Claims” were limited to those subject to a formal application for redress through judicial or nonjudicial processes, and those made where redress was not sought but which were substantiated after investigation by the Church or another body, or were otherwise accepted by the Church (Australian Government Royal Commission Into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse, 2017b)

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Summary

Mathews

This article first explains the nature of the Australian Royal Commission, and focuses on some of its key findings from case studies and data analysis It analyzes public health theory and regulatory theory, which are fundamentally concerned with social justice, to identify theoretically justified approaches to the implementation of measures to prevent, identify and respond to CSA, while isolating challenges to implementation. The article reviews literature on challenges to reform and compliance, and on prevention of institutional CSA and situational crime prevention, to identify the measures which have attracted emerging consensus as part of recommended practice to prevent, identify and respond to CSA It applies the precepts of regulatory theory and public health to the context of CSA in institutional contexts, to develop a theoretical basis for a model of implementation and regulation, and to indicate the nature and functions of a regulatory body for this context

Australia’s Royal Commission
Case study investigations
Public health theory and child sexual abuse
Regulatory theory and child sexual abuse
Conclusion
Full Text
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