The NSW Government has recently announced the establishment of a number of accommodation and reintegration services for offenders leaving prison and for others subject to non-custodial or parole orders. This shift recognises the established importance of post-release accommodation and individual case management for ex-prisoners as important steps towards addressing the high rates of re-incarceration of people in NSW. However, like the vast majority of such services, this latest measure does not sufficiently respond to the specific issues facing Aboriginal women, who are experiencing the fastest rate of increase of all groups of prisoners across Australia. Aboriginal women have higher rates of return to prison, higher rates of social and phy...
© 2018, Emerald Publishing Limited. Purpose: The rise in the incarceration of Aboriginal and Torres ...
This article examines women's imprisonment in Australia through a feminist multifocal lens. We consi...
[Extract] In 2018, the Australian Law Reform Commission’s Inquiry into the Incarceration Rate of Abo...
The NSW Government has recently announced the establishment of a number of accommodation and reinteg...
© 2019 The Authors Objective: To describe the social, emotional and physical wellbeing of Aboriginal...
This article is based on research with over 160 First Nations women in prisons in New South Wales, A...
Objective: To describe the social, emotional and physical wellbeing of Aboriginal mothers in prison....
The aim of this study was to listen to the voices of women experiencing incarceration and understand...
Aboriginal women are the fastest growing sector of the prison population in Australia. Over the last...
With the numbers of women imprisoned increasing across Western jurisdictions over the last 15 or so ...
Aboriginal women are the fastest growing sector of the prison population in Australia. Over the last...
At least 80% of Aboriginal people in Australian prisons have been there before. They have long been ...
Aboriginal women are vastly over-represented in the Australian prison system. Their recidivism rates...
University of Technology Sydney. Faculty of Health.Australian Aboriginal women are currently the fas...
Since the conclusion of the Royal Commission into Aboriginal Deaths in Custody (RCIADIC) in 1991 the...
© 2018, Emerald Publishing Limited. Purpose: The rise in the incarceration of Aboriginal and Torres ...
This article examines women's imprisonment in Australia through a feminist multifocal lens. We consi...
[Extract] In 2018, the Australian Law Reform Commission’s Inquiry into the Incarceration Rate of Abo...
The NSW Government has recently announced the establishment of a number of accommodation and reinteg...
© 2019 The Authors Objective: To describe the social, emotional and physical wellbeing of Aboriginal...
This article is based on research with over 160 First Nations women in prisons in New South Wales, A...
Objective: To describe the social, emotional and physical wellbeing of Aboriginal mothers in prison....
The aim of this study was to listen to the voices of women experiencing incarceration and understand...
Aboriginal women are the fastest growing sector of the prison population in Australia. Over the last...
With the numbers of women imprisoned increasing across Western jurisdictions over the last 15 or so ...
Aboriginal women are the fastest growing sector of the prison population in Australia. Over the last...
At least 80% of Aboriginal people in Australian prisons have been there before. They have long been ...
Aboriginal women are vastly over-represented in the Australian prison system. Their recidivism rates...
University of Technology Sydney. Faculty of Health.Australian Aboriginal women are currently the fas...
Since the conclusion of the Royal Commission into Aboriginal Deaths in Custody (RCIADIC) in 1991 the...
© 2018, Emerald Publishing Limited. Purpose: The rise in the incarceration of Aboriginal and Torres ...
This article examines women's imprisonment in Australia through a feminist multifocal lens. We consi...
[Extract] In 2018, the Australian Law Reform Commission’s Inquiry into the Incarceration Rate of Abo...