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Australian Justice Reinvestment Project in Kensington, New South Wales | Public & government service



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Australian Justice Reinvestment Project

Locality: Kensington, New South Wales



Address: UNSW Kensington, NSW, Australia

Website: http://justicereinvestment.unsw.edu.au

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24.01.2022 The Australian Law Reform Commission Inquiry into the Incarceration Rates of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples released it's discussion paper yester...day. "In preliminary consultations, the ALRC has heard widespread support for justice reinvestment initiatives for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities." The inquiry is also, 'focused on lower-level offences such as breaching bail, driver’s licence offences and offences for which the average sentence is less than 12 months, saying that Indigenous people were more likely to receive repeated short sentences than non-Indigenous people.' 'It recommended examining options to abolish short jail sentences of less than three months and proposed that states and territories do more to ensure that alternatives to detention, like the services required to facilitate community support orders, were culturally appropriate and available in regional and remote areas.'



23.01.2022 The Maranguka Justice Reinvestment Project in Bourke has the opportunity to share the Story of Maranguka and the first Justice Reinvestment project in Australia through Digital Story Tellers. Watch it here:

22.01.2022 People with unpaid fines should not be imprisoned but instead work off the debt, an influential government body has recommended. The Australian Law Reform Commi...ssion (ALRC) is examining ways to reduce the staggering number of Indigenous people behind bars. In a discussion paper, the commission said states and territories should abolish laws that imprison people because of unpaid penalties.

21.01.2022 The Conversation Hour: Children in jail 'Jon Faine's co-host is Russell Marks. His article Call For Backup: How authorities lost control of juvenile detention i...s in the March 2017 edition of The Monthly magazine. His book Crime and Punishment: Offenders and Victims in a Broken Justice System was published by Black Inc. Russell is a policy advisor to the federal Greens, an honorary associate at La Trobe University, and was previously a criminal defence lawyer. Their guests are Vincent Schiraldi, Shahleena Musk, and Julie Edwards. Julie is the CEO of Jesuit Social Services. Shahleena was a Senior Youth Lawyer at NAAJA (North Australian Aboriginal Justice Agency) from 2012 until January this year. She is now a Senior Policy Advocate at the Human Rights Law Centre in Melbourne. Vinnie is a Senior Research Fellow at Harvard Kennedy School, and was previously Director of Juvenile Corrections in Washington DC, and Commissioner of the NYC Department of Criminal Justice Vincent Schiraldi is in Melbourne for the Jesuit Social Services' National Justice Symposium which was held earlier this week.'



21.01.2022 'Well-funded and consistent youth programs deliver a social return of more than $4.50 to every dollar of investment, a report on Northern Territory services has... found.' 'The study, on the impact of youth programs in remote central Australia, found that, with enough support and effort, youth programs provided significant support to children, their families and communities, as well as the broader health, education and justice systems.' 'They also actively reduced rates of crime and drug and alcohol abuse among young people.' 'The report, presented in Canberra on Tuesday, comes amid ongoing issues with youth crime and substance abuse in the Northern Territory, and skyrocketing rates of incarceration particularly among Indigenous youth across the country.' 'The royal commission into the protection and detention of children in the NT has spent recent weeks hearing of the importance of early intervention in stopping the cycle of criminal behaviour and incarceration.' 'Tuesday’s report, by the Nous Group consulting firm, examined three youth programs in Utopia, Hermannsburg, and Yuendumu, which each had different levels of program size, resourcing and sophistication of activities.' 'It found all three were forecast to create a positive return over the next three years, ranging from $3.48 in Utopia to $4.56 in Yuendumu.' Read the full article:

19.01.2022 Australian jails are fuller than they’ve ever been. If you can't provide a pathway to people, then they're going to reoffend.

18.01.2022 The NSW Bar Association has called for an innovative indigenous-specific court model to be put in place as soon as possible in the wake of figures showing the state’s Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander jail population could be slashed under proposed non-custodial reforms.



17.01.2022 * One in 20 Aboriginal people in jail are serving a sentence for unlicensed driving and other "driver licence" offences; *Four in 20 Aboriginal and Torres Stra...it Islander people with a licence have had it disqualified, suspended or cancelled; * 12 per cent of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders found guilty of driving offences are jailed, compared to 5 per cent of the general population 'Professor Beetson said the community was caught between a "rock and a hard place". If members of the Indigenous community needed to go to Bourke to meet parole obligations, they had to choose between being "pinched for driving without a licence and going back to jail or not attending because there were no way of getting there".' Read the full article:

16.01.2022 We want to help connect them back to their identity in the country and community, support them moving forward, and identify some really good role models in the community for the young people, - Wade Longbottom.

12.01.2022 The fact is that the justice system has failed to adequately deal with the problems associated with indigenous community which has led to rising rates of incar...ceration, This means we need to look at new proposals because we cannot continue to lock up generation after generation of our indigenous brothers and sisters. http://www.theaustralian.com.au//e7840b9eec4776e6947a13efd

09.01.2022 'Young offenders would have more ways to avoid jail and fines under sweeping reforms being considered by the State Government.' 'They include raising the age of... criminal responsibility, limiting offences resulting in custodial sentences and removing fines for people young people who can’t afford them.' 'The State Government is considering the proposed reforms as new youth justice figures show young offenders in SA are spending less time in detention than any other state.' 'However, indigenous youths are 22 times more likely to end up in the juvenile justice system than non-indigenous youths.' Aboriginal Legal Rights Movement chairman Tauto Sansbury said- It is important for us to look at the issue of juvenile detention a different way, he said. We are currently creating a bigger prison population without adequate rehabilitation, particularly in juvenile prison. I don’t think it’s going soft on crime. If you continue to lock them up they just become bigger and smarter criminals. If you get the juvenile justice system right, it’s not a burden on taxpayers, Read more:

07.01.2022 "Justice Reinvestment is an important policy to reduce re-offending and consequently aboriginal incarceration rates, Mr Lynch said. 'He said the NSW Labor part...y was committed to justice reinvestment, promising to spend $4.5mil on the policy.' That’s a policy we continue to support. Proposals such as Cowra’s would be an ideal fit for our policy, Mr Lynch said.



06.01.2022 'Although obviously intended to improve community safety, mandatory minimum sentencing policies run counter to the significant body of evidence indicating that ...this approach to sentencing is costly, unlikely to improve public safety nor effective in deterring future offending.' 'The limits and dangers of mandatory sentencing schemes are well-established in Australian and international research.' 'Importantly, we know the threat of a mandatory minimum term of imprisonment does little to deter future offending. Therefore, the approach fails to achieve its aim of reducing offending and increasing public safety.' 'While policies that promise definite and lengthy terms of imprisonment for repeat violent offences may appear attractive within populist politics, they undermine long-established principles of proportionality and individualised justice.' 'From a purely economic perspective, the cost of this approach is staggering. That $309 million will not be spent on tackling the underlying causes of crime or implementing evidence-based criminal justice policies' 'And, at a time when Victoria and many Australian jurisdictions is imprisoning more people than ever, any policies that increase prisoner numbers must be seriously reconsidered.' 'Over two years on, the Law Council of Australia has appealed for the abolition of the law, noting that mandatory minimums create greater law and order problems than they solve.' Read the full article:

05.01.2022 'Australians are spending more on prisons and police than most other developed countries in the world, a new study has found.'

05.01.2022 'The Government has partnered with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander community provider Winnunga Nimmityjah Aboriginal Health Service to develop a family-fo...cused response to address the over-representation of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people in our justice system, Minister for Justice, Consumer Affairs and Road Safety, Shane Rattenbury announced. Mr Rattenbury and Winnunga Nimmityjah chief executive officer Julie Tongs today launched Yarrabi Bamirr, the ACT’s first Justice Reinvestment Trial. Yarrabi Bamirr, Ngunnawal words for Walk Tall, responds to the need for a whole of government and community service system response in addressing the over-representation of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people in the criminal justice system. A collaborative partnership between Winnunga Nimmityjah and the Justice and Community Safety Directorate, the Yarrabi Bamirr trial places particular focus on families at risk, assisting them to become self-managing, healthy and safe. As part of the program, social health team workers from Winnunga Nimmityjah will work together with families to co-design unique family plans to address their goals related to matters such as housing, health, justice, education and employment. Cross-government support will then be provided to families to address identified needs. Justice Reinvestment is one of the ways we are striving to develop smarter, community and family-focused, inclusive and cost-effective outcomes for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities, Mr Rattenbury said. Justice Reinvestment also looks to reduce crime by diverting those at risk from the criminal justice system. The evidence shows that where justice reinvestment measures are put in place, families and the wider community benefit.' Read more:

04.01.2022 'Rising prison population numbers and its associated costs are prompting questions about the efficacy of imprisonment. The purpose of imprisonment is to punish,... deter and rehabilitate however the high rates of recidivism suggest that imprisonment is not effective. Should we reconsider imprisonment as the ultimate punishment?' ANU College of Law Senior Lecturer Dr Anthony Hopkins joins ABC Overnights to dissect the role of prisons in the Australian legal system.

03.01.2022 We try and tell our young people to go along with the police, but they say to me: ‘uncle, I get sick of these bastards stopping me all the time’. - Shane Duff...y, co-chair of Change the Record. ' 'Duffy said the national statistics on youth incarceration, which show that more than half of all children in detention or on youth justice orders on any given day were from NSW or Queensland, showed efforts to address the problem should not be confined to the Territory.' Read the full article:

03.01.2022 Vincent Schiraldi promotes community-based programs and urges Victorian Premier to not funnel all funding into simply building more youth prison facilities http://www.theage.com.au//former-us-juvenile-jails-chief-u

01.01.2022 Djawa Yunupingu welcomes NITV to Yolngu Country. Sit back, relax and let NITV bring you everything you need to see from #Garma2017 this weekend.

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