In Australia, sentencing researchers have generally focussed on whether there is statistical equality/inequality in outcomes by reference to Indigenous status. However, contextualising the sentencing process requires us to move away from a reliance on statistical analyses alone, as this approach cannot tell us whether sentencing is an equitable process for Indigenous people. Consultation with those working at the sentencing ‘coal face’ provides valuable insight into the nexus between Indigenous status and sentencing. This article reports the main themes from surveys of the judiciary and prosecutors, and focus groups of Community Justice Groups undertaken in Queensland. The aim is to understand better the sentencing process for Indigenous Qu...
Australian research on Indigenous sentencing disparities of the standard of international work is so...
The significant overrepresentation of Indigenous people in Australian prisons has been the subject o...
Indigenous, sentencing, courts 3 This paper briefly summarises1 findings from a South Australian stu...
In Australia, sentencing researchers have generally focused on whether there is statistical equality...
Since 1999, a number of Indigenous sentencing courts have been established in Australia that use Ind...
There is a growing pool of research on court outcomes in sentencing Indigenous people but relatively...
Since 1999, a number of Indigenous sentencing courts have been established in Australia that use Ind...
At the end of the 20th century, Australia’s first Aboriginal court was established to sentence indig...
Indigenous sentencing courts are now an established form of innovative justice practice in most Aust...
Recent Australia research on Indigenous sentencing primarily explores whether disparities in sentenc...
In Australia, indigenous people comprise approximately 19 percent of the prison population. The Indi...
In their statistical analyses of higher court sentencing in South Australia, Jeffries and Bond (2009...
In Australia, research investigating Indigenous differences in sentencing is limited. This study exa...
[Extract] In Queensland, on the 19th of December 2000, the Queensland Aboriginal and Torres Strait I...
Indigenous participation in sentencing procedures has been occurring informally in remote communitie...
Australian research on Indigenous sentencing disparities of the standard of international work is so...
The significant overrepresentation of Indigenous people in Australian prisons has been the subject o...
Indigenous, sentencing, courts 3 This paper briefly summarises1 findings from a South Australian stu...
In Australia, sentencing researchers have generally focused on whether there is statistical equality...
Since 1999, a number of Indigenous sentencing courts have been established in Australia that use Ind...
There is a growing pool of research on court outcomes in sentencing Indigenous people but relatively...
Since 1999, a number of Indigenous sentencing courts have been established in Australia that use Ind...
At the end of the 20th century, Australia’s first Aboriginal court was established to sentence indig...
Indigenous sentencing courts are now an established form of innovative justice practice in most Aust...
Recent Australia research on Indigenous sentencing primarily explores whether disparities in sentenc...
In Australia, indigenous people comprise approximately 19 percent of the prison population. The Indi...
In their statistical analyses of higher court sentencing in South Australia, Jeffries and Bond (2009...
In Australia, research investigating Indigenous differences in sentencing is limited. This study exa...
[Extract] In Queensland, on the 19th of December 2000, the Queensland Aboriginal and Torres Strait I...
Indigenous participation in sentencing procedures has been occurring informally in remote communitie...
Australian research on Indigenous sentencing disparities of the standard of international work is so...
The significant overrepresentation of Indigenous people in Australian prisons has been the subject o...
Indigenous, sentencing, courts 3 This paper briefly summarises1 findings from a South Australian stu...