11.01.2018

Improving police culture

Recommendation 14–4            In order to further enhance cultural change within police that will ensure police practices and procedures do not disproportionately contribute to the incarceration of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples, the following initiatives should be considered:increasing Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander employment within police;providing specific cultural awareness training for police being deployed to

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11.01.2018

Key gaps

Recommendation 9–1               State and territory corrective services agencies should develop prison programs with relevant Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander organisations that address offending behaviours and/or prepare people for release. These programs should be made available to:prisoners held on remand;prisoners serving short sentences; andfemale Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander prisoners.9.15     Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples

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11.01.2018

Availability and flexibility of community-based sentencing options

Recommendation 7–1               State and territory governments should work with relevant Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander organisations and community organisations to improve access to community-based sentencing options for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander offenders, by:expanding the geographic reach of community-based sentencing options, particularly in regional and remote areas;providing community-based sentencing options that are culturally appropriate; andmaking

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11.01.2018

Reducing breach

7.106  Reductions in breach may be accomplished through engagement and collaboration with relevant Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander organisations to provide sentencing options and assistance in meeting conditions, partnering with agencies and service providers to provide co-location of services.[158] Breach rates may also be reduced by the use of graduated sanctions in order to provide

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11.01.2018

What is justice reinvestment?

4.7        A justice reinvestment approach to criminal justice reform involves a redirection of money from prisons to fund and rebuild human resources and physical infrastructure in areas most affected by high levels of incarceration.[3] Justice reinvestment originated in the United States (US) as a response to an exponential growth in the rate of imprisonment since

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11.01.2018

Justice reinvestment in action

The United States4.32     Justice reinvestment has been most extensively implemented in the US under the banner of the ‘Justice Reinvestment Initiative’ (JRI). The JRI focuses on state-level reforms to reduce corrections spending and to reinvest in strategies to increase public safety and strengthen communities.4.33     The JRI has been led by a number of think-tanks, non-profit

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11.01.2018

A national justice reinvestment body

Recommendation 4–1               Commonwealth, state and territory governments should provide support for the establishment of an independent justice reinvestment body. The purpose of the body should be to promote the reinvestment of resources from the criminal justice system to community-led, place-based initiatives that address the drivers of crime and incarceration, and to provide expertise on the

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09.01.2018

Overview of the Report

ContextIn 1991, the RCIADIC found that the fundamental causes for over-representation of Aboriginal people in custody were not located within the criminal justice system. Such a claim has been echoed many times since. In Chapter 2, the ALRC places the disproportionate incarceration rates of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples today in social and historical

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09.01.2018

Terms of Reference

ALRC inquiry into the incarceration rate of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoplesI, Senator the Hon George Brandis QC, Attorney-General of Australia, refer to the Australian Law Reform Commission, an inquiry into the over-representation of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples in our prisons.It is acknowledged that while laws and legal frameworks are an important factor

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29.09.2017

Appendix C: Inquiry report

Inquiry into Protecting the Rights of Older Australians from AbuseOn 23 February 2016, the Attorney-General, Senator the Hon George Brandis QC, provided Terms of Reference to the ALRC for a review of existing Commonwealth laws and legal frameworks which seek to safeguard and protect older persons from misuse or abuse by formal and informal carers,

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