Driven for the most part by recommendations of the Royal Commission into Aboriginal deaths in custody, Australian states and territories over the last two decades have introduced Indigenous Justice Agreements and related strategic frameworks in the hope of addressing consistently high rates of Indigenous incarceration and improving justice service delivery to Indigenous people. Through\ud analysis of relevant policy frameworks and associated policy material, rather than statistical analysis alone, we seek to examine whether strategic planning in this area\ud is actually improving Indigenous justice outcomes as intended. We apply seven criteria as a basis for our assessment of policy outcomes.\ud \ud Despite significant shortcomings, we conc...
In Australia, indigenous people comprise approximately 19 percent of the prison population. The Indi...
This article examines what kinds of policy reforms are required to reduce incarceration rates of Abo...
Indigenous people in Australia are vastly over-represented in police custody and prisons. This paper...
Over the last two decades, some Australian States and Territories have introduced Indigenous Justice...
Since 1999, a number of Indigenous sentencing courts have been established in Australia that use Ind...
Since 1999, a number of Indigenous sentencing courts have been established in Australia that use Ind...
Indigenous Justice Clearinghouse Research Brief 18 considers how policy makers develop, implement an...
At the end of the 20th century, Australia’s first Aboriginal court was established to sentence indig...
over-represented at all stages of the criminal justice system in Australia. There are many suggested...
The aim of Indigenous courts has been to make court processes more culturally appropriate, to engend...
Indigenous overrepresentation in Australia is a pervasive social injustice problem, which sees this ...
[Extract] In Queensland, on the 19th of December 2000, the Queensland Aboriginal and Torres Strait I...
nised that “…too many Aboriginal people are in custody too often”, and rec-ommended a strategy of im...
Indigenous sentencing courts are now an established form of innovative justice practice in most Aust...
In order for practitioners to divert successfully Indigenous Australians from vortex-like aspects of...
In Australia, indigenous people comprise approximately 19 percent of the prison population. The Indi...
This article examines what kinds of policy reforms are required to reduce incarceration rates of Abo...
Indigenous people in Australia are vastly over-represented in police custody and prisons. This paper...
Over the last two decades, some Australian States and Territories have introduced Indigenous Justice...
Since 1999, a number of Indigenous sentencing courts have been established in Australia that use Ind...
Since 1999, a number of Indigenous sentencing courts have been established in Australia that use Ind...
Indigenous Justice Clearinghouse Research Brief 18 considers how policy makers develop, implement an...
At the end of the 20th century, Australia’s first Aboriginal court was established to sentence indig...
over-represented at all stages of the criminal justice system in Australia. There are many suggested...
The aim of Indigenous courts has been to make court processes more culturally appropriate, to engend...
Indigenous overrepresentation in Australia is a pervasive social injustice problem, which sees this ...
[Extract] In Queensland, on the 19th of December 2000, the Queensland Aboriginal and Torres Strait I...
nised that “…too many Aboriginal people are in custody too often”, and rec-ommended a strategy of im...
Indigenous sentencing courts are now an established form of innovative justice practice in most Aust...
In order for practitioners to divert successfully Indigenous Australians from vortex-like aspects of...
In Australia, indigenous people comprise approximately 19 percent of the prison population. The Indi...
This article examines what kinds of policy reforms are required to reduce incarceration rates of Abo...
Indigenous people in Australia are vastly over-represented in police custody and prisons. This paper...