Rogue
Clerics
The Social
Problem of Clergy Deviance
By Anson Shupe
Description:
During the past several years the mass media in the United States
has been awash with reports of priestly pedophilia, ecclesiastical
cover-up, and clerical intimidation or financial settlements
intended to silence victims. Based on journalistic accounts, or
scholarly research, it might be assumed that this is a recent
phenomenon. Journalist reports began only within the past few years.
Similarly, most sociologists of religion and particularly
specialists in deviance and criminology did not reflect awareness of
clerical misbehavior in their work. Despite this, Anson Shupe shows
that clergy deviance, whether it is sexual or otherwise, is not
merely a recent problem. It is as old as the church itself and is
inevitably bound to recur due to the nature of religious groups.
This comprehensive analysis offers the first
up-to-date analysis of sexual, economic, and authoritative clergy
malfeasance across faiths and denominational authority structures.
Drawing on examples taken from antiquity up until the present day,
and using reports by historians, theologians, church spokespersons,
therapists, social scientists, and journalists, Shupe critically
evaluate clergy deviant behavior, dividing it into various types. He
also makes use of the therapeutic literature, addressing
victimization at the level of the individual, church, and community
at large. In this way, he compares the response of the clergy to
victims’ attempts to mobilize movements calling for church reform.
Perhaps most controversial, this book considers the possible
relationship of homosexuality in the clergy to the occurrences of
scandals in all religious traditions across the board.
As an overview of clergy misconduct, this book is
singular. There is simply no other comprehensive serious examination
of this subject. Written by a sociologist for a wide range of
readers, its multi-disciplinary nature, vivid examples, and wealth
of research, will make the volume of interest to sociologists of
religion and crime, historians and theologians, as well as a general
public.
Anson Shupe is professor of sociology at
the joint campus of Indiana University-Purdue University Fort Wayne
and is a member of the graduate faculties at both institutions. A
prolific writer dealing with religious movements, clergy misconduct,
violence, and inequality, he has most recently authored Agents of
Discord: Deprogramming, Pseudo-Science and the American Anitcult
Movement with Susan E. Darnell.
Publisher:
Transaction
Publications
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