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Indigenous Women's Offending Patterns: A Literature Review

TLDR
In this article, the authors present a literature review on Indigenous women's offending patterns and provide an important contribution to understand an often neglected area of criminal justice, and highlight the need for further research and relevant services.
Abstract
This report is a literature review on Indigenous women’s offending patterns and therefore provides an important contribution to understanding an often neglected area of criminal justice. The report presents information on Indigenous women as offenders and prisoners, as well as considering the issue of over-policing, including for juvenile Indigenous females. Data are also presented on community corrections and periodic detention and the under-utilisation of juvenile diversion. The majority of information in the report relates to Indigenous women as prisoners, including information on imprisonment rates and numbers. Significantly, the rate of imprisonment of Indigenous women across Australia rose from 346 to 369 per 100,000 between 2006 and June 2009. In addition, Indigenous women outnumbered Indigenous men as a proportion of the relevant prison population in almost all jurisdictions. Indigenous women generally serve shorter sentences than their non-Indigenous counterparts, which suggests that Indigenous women are being imprisoned for more minor offences, especially public order offences. Indigenous women are also more likely to be on remand than non-Indigenous women.The characteristics of Indigenous female prisoners are considered in this report, with particular reference to the comparatively high rates of hospital admissions for mental disorders and post-release mortality rates. Examination of Indigenous women’s role as mothers and carers highlights the need for further research and relevant services. Policing, court and corrections data provide an overview of the types of offences committed by Indigenous women, with particular reference to the offences of public drunkenness, assault and homicide. The relationship between Indigenous women’s offending patterns and their exposure to family violence is explored and highlights the need for further examination.

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Citations
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Systematic Gender Violence and the Rule of Law: Aboriginal Communities in Australia and Post-War Liberia

TL;DR: In this article, the authors explored the extent to which the Western concept of the rule of law impacts systematic violence against Indigenous girls and women in Australia and post-war Liberia, and found that although the principle of the Rule of Law is an emancipatory tool for justice and redress generally, it can also be an apparatus for persistent systemic violence against women.

What works? A review of actions addressing the social and economic determinants of Indigenous health

TL;DR: This paper links successful actions which result in positive outcomes for Indigenous Australians in each of the key determinants to ultimately improving health and wellbeing and contributing towards ‘closing the gap’ in health and wellness.
Journal ArticleDOI

Violence risk assessment in Australian aboriginal offender populations: A review of the literature

TL;DR: In this article, a concert of violence risk markers that are more prevalent among Aboriginal Australian offenders compared with non-Aboriginal offenders were examined in light of their social and historical context.
Posted Content

Good Practice in Women's Prisons: A Literature Review

TL;DR: The need for the development of specific policies, practices and initiatives that acknowledge the gender-specific needs of female prisoners and place female rehabilitation as a central criminal justice priority in its own right is highlighted.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Domestic Violence Protection Order system as entry to the criminal justice system for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people

TL;DR: The domestic violence protection order (DVO) system is a hybrid system of criminalisation in which the DVO itself is a civil order, but any contravention of that order may result in a criminal charge.
References
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Extreme cause-specific mortality in a cohort of adult prisoners—1988 to 2002: a data-linkage study

TL;DR: Mortality of male and female offenders was far greater than expected for all major causes, especially deaths caused by drug overdose, and there remains an overwhelming need for enhanced responses to mental health and drug problems for people who have been in prison.
DatasetDOI

Drugs and crime: A study of incarcerated female offenders: (583072012-001)

Holly Johnson
Abstract: The Australian Institute of Criminology is undertaking research on the drug use careers of adult males, females and juveniles incarcerated in Australian prisons. The objective of the Drug Use Careers of Offenders (DUCO) female study is to contribute to the empirical evidence about the interaction between drug use and criminal offending among incarcerated women. This monograph presents findings from the DUCO female study, which was based on interviews with 470 women incarcerated in Australian prisons. Findings are presented on offending histories, drug use, links between drug and alcohol use and crime, temporal order of drug use and offending, and risk factors for drug use and offending. The results demonstrate important differences in the patterns of drug use of women as compared to men. Understanding patters in offending and drug use, and the connection between the two, may assist in the development of interventions and crime reduction strategies for women offenders.
Journal Article

Trends and Patterns in Domestic Violence Assaults

TL;DR: In this article, the authors used data recorded by the New South Wales (NSW) Police to provide information on the trends and patterns in domestic violence assaults in NSW and examined the spatial distribution of domestic violence assault and the locations and premises at which these assaults occur.

Indigenous perpetrators of violence: Prevalence and risk factors for offending

TL;DR: The Australian Institute of Criminology was funded by the Australian Crime Commission to undertake research that could inform and complement the work of the National Indigenous Violence and Child Abuse Intelligence Task Force.
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