Indigenous offenders are heavily over-represented in the Australian and Canadian criminal justice systems. In the case of R v Gladue, the Supreme Court of Canada held that sentencing judges are to recognise the adverse systemic and background factors that many Aboriginal Canadians face and consider all reasonable alternatives to imprisonment in light of this. In R v Ipeelee, the Court reiterated the need to fully acknowledge the oppressive environment faced by Aboriginal Canadians throughout their lives and the importance of sentencing courts applying appropriate sentencing options. In 2013, the High Court of Australia handed down its decision in Bugmy v The Queen. The Court affirmed that deprivation is a relevant consideration and worthy o...
This chapter explores how institutional inter-generational trauma is perpetuated by criminal justice...
Since 1999, a number of Indigenous sentencing courts have been established in Australia that use Ind...
[Extract] There was optimism at the time of the Royal Commission into Aboriginal Deaths in Custody (...
Indigenous offenders are heavily over-represented in the Australian and Canadian criminal justice sy...
Indigenous offenders are heavily over-represented in the Australian and Canadian criminal justice sy...
There is a growing pool of research on court outcomes in sentencing Indigenous people but relatively...
Indigenous people in Australia are vastly over-represented in police custody and prisons. This paper...
The grant of special leave in Bugmy v The Queen 1 has provided an occasion for the High Court to rul...
At the end of the 20th century, Australia’s first Aboriginal court was established to sentence indig...
Three strikes laws are discriminatory but not for previously advanced reasons. The three strikes law...
The Supreme Court of Canada’s decision in March 2012 in R. v. Ipeelee confirmed that the Court remai...
Since 1999, a number of Indigenous sentencing courts have been established in Australia that use Ind...
It is common knowledge, especially in the context of the findings of the Royal Commission into Abori...
The High Court decision in Bugmy (2013) was a disappointment for those hoping for an acknowledgemen...
In their statistical analyses of higher court sentencing in South Australia, Jeffries and Bond (2009...
This chapter explores how institutional inter-generational trauma is perpetuated by criminal justice...
Since 1999, a number of Indigenous sentencing courts have been established in Australia that use Ind...
[Extract] There was optimism at the time of the Royal Commission into Aboriginal Deaths in Custody (...
Indigenous offenders are heavily over-represented in the Australian and Canadian criminal justice sy...
Indigenous offenders are heavily over-represented in the Australian and Canadian criminal justice sy...
There is a growing pool of research on court outcomes in sentencing Indigenous people but relatively...
Indigenous people in Australia are vastly over-represented in police custody and prisons. This paper...
The grant of special leave in Bugmy v The Queen 1 has provided an occasion for the High Court to rul...
At the end of the 20th century, Australia’s first Aboriginal court was established to sentence indig...
Three strikes laws are discriminatory but not for previously advanced reasons. The three strikes law...
The Supreme Court of Canada’s decision in March 2012 in R. v. Ipeelee confirmed that the Court remai...
Since 1999, a number of Indigenous sentencing courts have been established in Australia that use Ind...
It is common knowledge, especially in the context of the findings of the Royal Commission into Abori...
The High Court decision in Bugmy (2013) was a disappointment for those hoping for an acknowledgemen...
In their statistical analyses of higher court sentencing in South Australia, Jeffries and Bond (2009...
This chapter explores how institutional inter-generational trauma is perpetuated by criminal justice...
Since 1999, a number of Indigenous sentencing courts have been established in Australia that use Ind...
[Extract] There was optimism at the time of the Royal Commission into Aboriginal Deaths in Custody (...