Consistent with other high income countries in the West, prisons are being built or expanded in every Australian state and territory to house increasing numbers of prisoners. Despite decreasing crime victimisation rates in Australia, incarceration rates have doubled over the last thirty years. Australia’s use of imprisonment has major economic and social equity costs, especially given the over-representation of Indigenous Australians and other socially disadvantaged groups in prison. Evidence increasingly points to the limitation of incarceration as a tool for effective offender rehabilitation suggesting that a new policy agenda on responses to offending is warranted. Yet, public opinion is generally assessed and perceived to hold punitive ...
There is a relatively long tradition by legal scholars of gauging public perceptions about sentencin...
This paper examines the critical issue of public confidence in sentencing, and presents findings fro...
Did you know that of the more than 23 000 sentenced offenders received into Australian prisons each ...
Consistent with other high income countries in the West, prisons are being built or expanded in ever...
Consistent with other high income countries in the West, prisons are being built or expanded in ever...
Abstract Alarming over-representation of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people in Australian...
This paper outlines the results of recent Australian research studies on public attitudes to sentenc...
This paper examines the critical issue of public confidence in sentencing, and presents findings fro...
The imprisonment rate in Australia is at unprecedented high levels, both interms of actual prisoner ...
This paper examines the critical issue of public confidence in sentencing, and presents findings fro...
This article reports on the outcomes of small group deliberations on levels of punitiveness and publ...
This paper examines the critical issue of public confidence in sentencing, and presents findings fro...
This paper examines the critical issue of public confidence in sentencing, and presents findings fro...
Imprisonment is a growth industry in Australia. Over the past 30–40 years all state and territory ju...
PERSONS arguing for and against changing legal codes and the penal system often refer to the state o...
There is a relatively long tradition by legal scholars of gauging public perceptions about sentencin...
This paper examines the critical issue of public confidence in sentencing, and presents findings fro...
Did you know that of the more than 23 000 sentenced offenders received into Australian prisons each ...
Consistent with other high income countries in the West, prisons are being built or expanded in ever...
Consistent with other high income countries in the West, prisons are being built or expanded in ever...
Abstract Alarming over-representation of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people in Australian...
This paper outlines the results of recent Australian research studies on public attitudes to sentenc...
This paper examines the critical issue of public confidence in sentencing, and presents findings fro...
The imprisonment rate in Australia is at unprecedented high levels, both interms of actual prisoner ...
This paper examines the critical issue of public confidence in sentencing, and presents findings fro...
This article reports on the outcomes of small group deliberations on levels of punitiveness and publ...
This paper examines the critical issue of public confidence in sentencing, and presents findings fro...
This paper examines the critical issue of public confidence in sentencing, and presents findings fro...
Imprisonment is a growth industry in Australia. Over the past 30–40 years all state and territory ju...
PERSONS arguing for and against changing legal codes and the penal system often refer to the state o...
There is a relatively long tradition by legal scholars of gauging public perceptions about sentencin...
This paper examines the critical issue of public confidence in sentencing, and presents findings fro...
Did you know that of the more than 23 000 sentenced offenders received into Australian prisons each ...