Abstract: This article examines the notion and practice of Justice Reinvestment (‘JR’), an emerging approach addressing the high social and economic costs of soaring incarceration rates. JR invests in public safety by reallocating dollars from corrections budgets to finance education, housing, healthcare, and jobs in high-crime communities. Key distinguishing features of JR (including justice and asset mapping, budgetary devolution and localism, and the desirability of bipartisanship) are briefly outlined, followed by discussion of its recent emergence and application in the United States, and to a lesser extent in the United Kingdom. The prospects for the adoption of JR approaches in Australia are then considered, with particular reference...
Much of the conceptual space occupied by Justice Reinvestment theory suggests clear links with the t...
Justice reinvestment was introduced as a response to mass incarceration and racial disparity in the ...
In response to the disproportionate rate of Māori within the New Zealand (NZ) criminal justice syste...
Justice reinvestment (JR) emerged in the US in 2004 as a strategy for reversing the crisis of over-i...
Justice reinvestment was introduced as a response to mass incarceration and racial disparity in the ...
This paper looks at justice issues, and in particular, the potential implementation of Justice Reinv...
Recent years have seen high levels of public spending on criminal justice but to relatively little e...
The U.S. and Australia are in different phases with regard to justice re-investment (JRI) strategies...
Justice Reinvestment is both an ideal and an approach to reducing mass incarceration. It was origina...
This chapter draws on the work of the Australian Justice Reinvestment Project (AJRP) (Brown et al., ...
Justice Reinvestment is being actively promoted as one means of reducing high levels of incarceratio...
As a result of increased advocacy for justice reinvestment in recent years, the Australian Legal and...
[Extract] JCU is interested in commencing a project to explore the potential for introduction of a j...
Justice reinvestment was originally developed as a policy to reduce incarceration rates by investing...
[Extract] What is Justice Reinvestment? Justice Reinvestment is a strategy for reducing the number o...
Much of the conceptual space occupied by Justice Reinvestment theory suggests clear links with the t...
Justice reinvestment was introduced as a response to mass incarceration and racial disparity in the ...
In response to the disproportionate rate of Māori within the New Zealand (NZ) criminal justice syste...
Justice reinvestment (JR) emerged in the US in 2004 as a strategy for reversing the crisis of over-i...
Justice reinvestment was introduced as a response to mass incarceration and racial disparity in the ...
This paper looks at justice issues, and in particular, the potential implementation of Justice Reinv...
Recent years have seen high levels of public spending on criminal justice but to relatively little e...
The U.S. and Australia are in different phases with regard to justice re-investment (JRI) strategies...
Justice Reinvestment is both an ideal and an approach to reducing mass incarceration. It was origina...
This chapter draws on the work of the Australian Justice Reinvestment Project (AJRP) (Brown et al., ...
Justice Reinvestment is being actively promoted as one means of reducing high levels of incarceratio...
As a result of increased advocacy for justice reinvestment in recent years, the Australian Legal and...
[Extract] JCU is interested in commencing a project to explore the potential for introduction of a j...
Justice reinvestment was originally developed as a policy to reduce incarceration rates by investing...
[Extract] What is Justice Reinvestment? Justice Reinvestment is a strategy for reducing the number o...
Much of the conceptual space occupied by Justice Reinvestment theory suggests clear links with the t...
Justice reinvestment was introduced as a response to mass incarceration and racial disparity in the ...
In response to the disproportionate rate of Māori within the New Zealand (NZ) criminal justice syste...