The work of acknowledgment : 'Loud fence’ as community-level response to institutional child sexual abuse testimony Dave McDonald
By: McDonald, Dave.
Material type: ArticleSeries: Social & Legal Studies.Publisher: Sage, 2024Subject(s): ADULT SURVIVORS OF SEXUAL ABUSE | CHILD SEXUAL ABUSE | COMMUNITY ACTION | Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse | INSTITUTIONAL ABUSE | INTERNATIONAL | AUSTRALIA | VICTORIAOnline resources: DOI: 10.1177/09646639231171679 (Open access) In: Social & Legal Studies, 2024, 33(2):213-235Summary: Since the 1980s, the global dimensions of institutional child sexual abuse have become increasingly apparent. In some countries this has had a profound impact locally. In Australia, one such place has been the storied town of Ballarat. Throughout Australia's Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse, Ballarat became a significant focus of the Inquiry. As local abuse became clearer, colourful ribbons began appearing at sites throughout the town. This article investigates the meaning of such a response, and its role in relation to survivor testimony. Transforming into a movement that persists to this day, the effect is to reconsolidate a community's ‘difficult heritage’ of institutional abuse into a more celebrated story of rebellion and protest. The originality of the article stems from the contribution it makes to understanding community-level responses to institutional abuse, and the role of ritual in the formation of collective memory. (Author's abstract). Record #8593Social & Legal Studies, 2024, 33(2):213-235
Since the 1980s, the global dimensions of institutional child sexual abuse have become increasingly apparent. In some countries this has had a profound impact locally. In Australia, one such place has been the storied town of Ballarat. Throughout Australia's Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse, Ballarat became a significant focus of the Inquiry. As local abuse became clearer, colourful ribbons began appearing at sites throughout the town. This article investigates the meaning of such a response, and its role in relation to survivor testimony. Transforming into a movement that persists to this day, the effect is to reconsolidate a community's ‘difficult heritage’ of institutional abuse into a more celebrated story of rebellion and protest. The originality of the article stems from the contribution it makes to understanding community-level responses to institutional abuse, and the role of ritual in the formation of collective memory. (Author's abstract). Record #8593