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Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology

Impact factor: 0.796 5-Year impact factor: 1.163 Print ISSN: 0004-8658 Publisher: Sage Publications

Subject: Criminology & Penology

Most recent papers:

  • The impact of the Canterbury Earthquakes on the temporal and spatial patterning of crime in Christchurch, New Zealand.
    Breetzke, G. D., King, M., Fabris-Rotelli, I.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. November 28, 2016

    The Canterbury Earthquakes struck the Canterbury region of the South Island of New Zealand between September 2010 and February 2011. The Earthquakes resulted in widespread structural damage to Christchurch, the main city of the region, and greatly impacted other aspects of society including crime. In this study, we adopt an exploratory approach to investigate the impact that these earthquakes have had on the temporal and spatial patterning of four types of crime in Christchurch: assault, domestic violence, burglary and arson. Overall crime has decreased in post-quake Christchurch with the notable exception of domestic violence. We found remarkably similar temporal signatures of crime for all crime types occurring across both the pre- and post-earthquake periods. Spatially, crime has increased in the majority of neighbourhoods in Christchurch post-quake despite overall crime levels being down. Explanations for this paradoxical and other finding are outlined in the context of a rebuilding and recovering city.

    November 28, 2016   doi: 10.1177/0004865816679687   open full text
  • Policing intimate partner violence in Victoria (Australia): Examining police attitudes and the potential of specialisation.
    Segrave, M., Wilson, D., Fitz-Gibbon, K.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. November 23, 2016

    The adequacy of police responses to intimate partner violence has long animated scholarly debate, review and legislative change. While there have been significant shifts in community recognition of and concern about intimate partner violence, particularly in the wake of the Victorian Royal Commission into Family Violence, it nonetheless remains a significant form of violence and harm across Australian communities and a key issue for police, as noted in the report and recommendations of the Royal Commission. This article draws on findings from semi-structured interviews (n = 163) with police in Victoria and pursues two key inter-related arguments. The first is that police attitudes towards incidents of intimate partner violence remain overwhelmingly negative. Despite innovations in policy and training, we suggest that this consistent dissatisfaction with intimate partner violence incidents as a policing task indicates a significant barrier, possibly insurmountable, to attempts to reform the policing of intimate partner violence via force-wide initiatives and the mobilisation of general duties for this purpose. Consequently, our second argument is that specialisation via a commitment to dedicated intimate partner violence units – implemented more consistently and comprehensively than Victoria Police has to date – extends the greatest promise for effective policing of intimate partner violence in the future.

    November 23, 2016   doi: 10.1177/0004865816679686   open full text
  • Chinese culture and its influence on female prisoner behavior in the prisoner-guard relationship.
    Liu, L., Chui, W. H.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. November 23, 2016

    Although scholars have shown continuing interest in studying prisoner behavior, relatively few studies focus on Chinese female prisoners’ behavior in the prisoner–guard relationship. In this study, 65 semi-structured interviews were conducted with both female prisoners and guards to document Chinese culture’s influence on female prisoners’ behavior. According to the findings, female prisoners mainly choose to maintain good guanxi (interpersonal relationships) with guards, in order to pragmatically maximize the benefits of these relationships. In addition to this, based on personalism and pragmatism, they usually act in an individualistic manner, instead of forming prisoner sub-cultures. These findings suggest that Chinese female prisoners use multiple strategies to manage their relationships with guards, tending to employ methods centered on the notion of guanxi.

    November 23, 2016   doi: 10.1177/0004865816679685   open full text
  • The effectiveness of Australias drug courts.
    Kornhauser, R.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. November 09, 2016

    Operating in Australia since 1999, drug courts are now present in the majority of Australian jurisdictions. This paper takes stock of the impact evaluations of Australia’s drug courts to date, and considers to what extent these evaluations support drug courts as being more effective than ‘conventional’ sanctions in reducing recidivism.

    While Australian evaluations indicate drug courts reduce recidivism more than conventional sanctions, certainty in these findings is tempered by mixed results and methodological limitations.

    November 09, 2016   doi: 10.1177/0004865816673412   open full text
  • Cultures of gendered violence: An integrative review of measures of attitudinal support for violence against women.
    Powell, A., Webster, K.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. October 27, 2016

    National and international research has repeatedly identified the specific gendered nature and context of women’s victimisation of violence, whereby women are disproportionately victims of sexual and partner violence and overwhelmingly at the hands of known male perpetrators. As such, violence against women warrants a targeted and substantial focus, within overall violence reduction and prevention efforts. In the Australian policy context, there is an emerging and influential focus on attitudes towards violence against women as key targets for primary prevention and as foci for monitoring progress in reducing this violence. The Australian National Community Attitudes Towards Violence Against Women Survey was established to estimate community-level understanding of and attitudes towards violence against women. It has arguably evolved into an important instrument both for monitoring shifts in Australians’ knowledge and attitudes, as well as for directing primary prevention efforts. The purpose of this article is to provide an integrative review in relation to one of the key dimensions of the national community attitudes survey: violence supportive attitudes (see Webster et al., 2014). Here, we seek to identify patterns in defining and measuring attitudes that support violence against women, as well as advance the field by offering recommendations for progressing the measurement of violence supportive attitudes in Australia in the future.

    October 27, 2016   doi: 10.1177/0004865816675669   open full text
  • Over-represented and misunderstood: Pacific young people and juvenile justice in NSW.
    Liddell, M., Blake, M., Singh, S.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. October 25, 2016

    In New South Wales, Australia, statistics show that Pacific young people are over-represented in the juvenile justice system. They enter later than other young offenders, frequently for violent offending. Drawing on research with Pacific young people on correctional orders, their families and communities, we outline the reasons for their over-representation using a risk and protective paradigm. Family connections, religious faith and cultural identity are reportedly strong for Pacific young people, but they struggle to negotiate differences between Pacific and Australian cultures. Misunderstanding of these issues and Pacific young people’s typical offending trajectory results in a lack of interventions to reduce this offending behaviour. This article makes a contribution to knowledge of a rarely researched group of young people in the juvenile justice system. It highlights the need for increased awareness of issues that Pacific young offenders face.

    October 25, 2016   doi: 10.1177/0004865816666614   open full text
  • Policing immigrants: Using a randomized control trial of procedural justice policing to promote trust and cooperation.
    Murphy, K., Mazerolle, L.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. October 13, 2016

    Immigrants are often less trusting of police than non-immigrants because they can feel ill-served by police and the laws they enforce. Procedural justice policing has been regarded as central to improving public trust and confidence in police. Using survey data from citizens exposed to the world’s first randomized field trial of procedural justice policing (Queensland Community Engagement Trial), we found that trust in police, but not willingness to report crime to police, was higher among those exposed to the procedural justice condition compared to the control condition. Interestingly, the effect of procedural justice on trust and crime reporting was moderated by age and immigrant status; procedural justice had a more positive effect for immigrants, particularly those younger than 26 years of age.

    October 13, 2016   doi: 10.1177/0004865816673691   open full text
  • Free-text comments as a tool for developing the self-report method: Parents responses to a survey on violence against children.
    Ellonen, N., Fagerlund, M., Pösö, T.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. September 30, 2016

    Self-report measures are used to study the degree of victimisation in children that have experienced violence. Very little methodological attention is, however, paid to development of these measures. In this article, we will analyse parents’ free-text comments in response to a self-report survey of their own violent behaviour towards their children. Themes presented by parents concerning violence against children as a phenomenon will be analysed and methodological input of these free-text comments in a self-report survey will be examined. Analysis is based on survey data collected in Finland in 2011 (N = 3170) including 2047 free-text comments. Based on the thematic analysis of those comments, four themes were phrased: making sense of the responses, defining violence, children and violence in society and experiencing exclusion. Parents’ comments with respect to these themes reflected the complexity of what actually constitutes violence against children. Analysis also showed that free-text comments are a valuable and ethically sound tool for developing the self-report measure.

    September 30, 2016   doi: 10.1177/0004865816671381   open full text
  • Privatising public prisons: Penality, law and practice.
    Liebling, A., Ludlow, A.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. September 28, 2016

    In October 2011, HM Prison Birmingham was transferred from public to private management, under G4S. This was the first time that an existing operational public prison was privatised in the UK. The move marked the third and most far reaching phase of prison privatisation policy, and was intended both to increase quality of life for prisoners, from a low baseline, and to reduce costs. Prior to 2011, private prisons had all been new-builds. Private contractors had thus far avoided the additional challenges of inheriting a pre-existing workforce and operating in old, often unsuitable, buildings. This article reports on a longitudinal evaluation of the complex process of the transition, and some outcomes for both staff and prisoners. As an experiment in the reorganisation of work and life in a ‘traditional’ public sector prison, the exercise was unprecedented, and has set the agenda for future transformations. The example illustrates the intense, distinctive and rapidly changing nature of penality as it makes itself felt in the lived prison experience, and raises important questions about the changing use of State power.

    September 28, 2016   doi: 10.1177/0004865816671380   open full text
  • An exploration of Thai public perceptions of defenses in cases of women who kill their domestically violent spouses.
    Ho, R. T. K., Chantagul, N.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. September 12, 2016

    The present study investigated the issue of domestic violence in Thailand and in particular the reactions of the Thai populace (male versus female) to a battered woman who killed her abusive spouse, as well as how such reactions could be influenced by the presentation of expert testimony related to the battered woman syndrome. Cluster sampling conducted within the Bangkok metropolitan area in Thailand yielded a sample of 1190 participants who voluntarily filled in the study’s questionnaire. Multi-group path analysis showed no significant gender difference in the direct influence of battered woman syndrome information on the verdict/judgment rendered and suggests that the provision of such information in spousal homicide trials within the Thai context may not be efficacious in influencing the participants’ verdict judgments. Results however did indicate an indirect effect of the battered woman syndrome information on the verdict/judgment rendered being mediated by the defense strategy of self-defense. This finding indicated that the battered woman syndrome information presented aided the participants in contextualizing the defendant’s killing in a frame of self-defense, rather than inappropriately applying a form of "reasonableness" in their verdict/judgment. These findings are discussed in relation to their implications for the presentation of battered woman syndrome information in trials of Thai battered women who killed their abusive spouses.

    September 12, 2016   doi: 10.1177/0004865816668222   open full text
  • Patterns of Intimate Partner Violence victimization among Australia and New Zealand female university students: An initial examination of child maltreatment and self-reported depressive symptoms across profiles.
    Cale, J., Tzoumakis, S., Leclerc, B., Breckenridge, J.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. September 06, 2016

    The aim of this study was to examine the relationship between child abuse, depression, and patterns of Intimate Partner Violence victimization among female university students in Australia and New Zealand. Data were based on the Australia/New Zealand portion of the International Dating Violence Study (2001–2005) (n = 293). Using Latent Class Analysis, Low-, Moderate-, and High-level Intimate Partner Violence profiles were identified that differed according to the variety, degree, and severity of Intimate Partner Violence. Furthermore, the combination of child maltreatment and self-reported depressive symptoms differed across profiles. The results highlighted differential pathways from child maltreatment to specific Intimate Partner Violence victimization patterns. These findings provide further evidence for the importance of early intervention strategies to prevent Intimate Partner Violence, and specifically for children who experience abuse and neglect to help prevent subsequent victimization experiences in intimate relationship contexts.

    September 06, 2016   doi: 10.1177/0004865816666615   open full text
  • Upholding whose right? Discretionary police powers to punish, collective 'pre-victimisation and the dilution of individual rights.
    Farmer, C.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. July 25, 2016

    This article uses the example of Victoria’s alcohol-related banning notice provisions to explore the changing conception of balance within criminal justice processes. Despite the formalisation of individual rights within measures such as Victoria’s Charter of Human Rights and Responsibilities Act 2006, the discretionary power of the police to issue on-the-spot punishments in response to actual or potential criminal behaviour has increased steadily. A key driver, evident across the parliamentary debates of the banning legislation, is a presumed need to protect the broader community of potential victims. As a result, the individual rights of those accused (but not necessarily convicted) of undesirable behaviours are increasingly subordinated to the pre-emptive protection of the law-abiding majority. This shift embodies a largely unsubstantiated notion of collective pre-victimisation. Significantly, despite the expectations of Victoria’s Charter, measures such as banning notices have been enacted with insufficient evidence of the underlying collective risk, of their likely effectiveness and without meaningful ongoing scrutiny. The motto of Victoria Police – Uphold the Right – appears to belie a growing uncertainty over whose rights should be upheld and how.

    July 25, 2016   doi: 10.1177/0004865816660351   open full text
  • Patriarchy, gender, infantilisation: A cultural account of police intelligence work in Scotland.
    Atkinson, C.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. July 07, 2016

    Drawing upon qualitative research undertaken in Scotland, this paper provides new insights into police culture by exploring the interactions between sworn police officers and civilian intelligence analysts engaged in intelligence work. The claim is made that by exploring the cultural impact of intelligence analysis, it is possible to identify patriarchal dispositions within police culture and the emergence of a gender order in policing that subordinates femininity, youth and other masculinities that run counter to police culture's form of hegemonic masculinity. This gender order is interwoven with processes of infantilisation that inhibit the integration of intelligence analysts into police intelligence work. This article concludes by discussing the prospects for cultural change in policing from the inter-related perspectives of both social theory and professional practice.

    July 07, 2016   doi: 10.1177/0004865815626964   open full text
  • Body-worn video: A systematic review of literature.
    Cubitt, T. I., Lesic, R., Myers, G. L., Corry, R.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. July 07, 2016

    Law enforcement use of video-based technology has substantially increased over the past decade. This systematic review examines the current evidence base for efficacy of body-worn video and the current case for implementation. Five articles were identified as pertinent to this review from a search of five electronic databases, with a further six articles of grey literature included. Inter-rater reliability was high amongst three independent screeners of literature. Articles were short listed for review if they explicitly identified police and recording devices as topic areas. Articles were then excluded if they did not involve an operational trial of body-worn video. Eleven articles were included for review; of the five peer-reviewed studies, two were randomised controlled trials. An abundance of evidence was provided; however, the majority of articles were methodologically weak. Body-worn video was shown to reduce use of force incidents, crime rates for certain crime types and court costs. Public response to body-worn video was varied, as was police officer and public opinion. Due to methodological limitations evident in most studies and the general lack of peer-reviewed material, further research is required; however, there are some considerable benefits reported in the current literature.

    July 07, 2016   doi: 10.1177/0004865816638909   open full text
  • Public assessments of the police and policing in Hong Kong.
    Adorjan, M., Lee, M.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. July 06, 2016

    This paper presents the findings from a focus group research study on public assessments of the police and policing in Hong Kong. The main findings indicate that while people have generally positive views about police effectiveness in responding promptly to and fighting crime, they have decidedly mixed views regarding stop and search and public order policing. By drawing on the multi-dimensional framework of trust proposed by other policing scholars, we suggest that a useful way to conceptualize public assessments of the police and questions of satisfaction and trust of policing in Hong Kong is to distinguish between people's instrumental concerns about personal safety and crime and their affective concerns about the process of policing and the symbolic role of the police in maintaining a particular way of life. The paper concludes by reaffirming the value of sociologically informed, qualitative policing research that examines questions of police-citizen relationship and legitimacy within a broader socio-political context.

    July 06, 2016   doi: 10.1177/0004865816656721   open full text
  • Examining forensic interviewers perceptions of practice-focused supervision.
    Wolfman, M., Brown, D., Jose, P.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. July 05, 2016

    Regular supervision influences interviewing quality with child witnesses. It is unclear, however, whether interviewers recognize the importance of supervision, and how often they access it. The present study surveyed 39 New Zealand Specialist Child Witness Interviewers (otherwise known as forensic interviewers), and examined: (a) their access to, and, perceptions of supervision, and (b) factors that may influence their access to, and, perceptions of supervision. We identified 26 interviewers who received some form of practice-focused supervision. Within this group, there was considerable variability in terms of how often they accessed supervision, and, their ratings of how satisfied they were with their access to, and the content of, supervision. Furthermore, some of those who did participate in supervision felt they did not actually receive specific input about their interviewing. Thus, an important area for investment in promoting good interviewing practice is developing effective approaches to facilitate interviewers engaging in regular practice-focused supervision, perhaps, at least in part, by addressing some of systemic barriers identified (e.g. limited financial support, time constraints, lack of experienced supervisors, lack of understanding/support from managerial staff and geographical isolation).

    July 05, 2016   doi: 10.1177/0004865816655588   open full text
  • Countering the Australian 'ndrangheta: The criminalisation of mafia behaviour in Australia between national and comparative criminal law.
    Sergi, A.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. June 13, 2016

    Mafia-type criminal groups belonging to, or originated from, the Calabrian ‘ndrangheta from Southern Italy, have been object of recent academic research and media attention in Australia. The Australian ‘ndrangheta, as qualified form of organised crime, poses new challenges for law enforcement in the country. This paper briefly looks at the strategies to fight organised crime in Australia, with specific focus on anti-association laws. By using a comparative approach, the paper will look at the criminalisation of mafias as qualified forms of organised crime in other two jurisdictions, Italy and the USA, to advocate for an effective mafia criminalisation in Australia. In conclusion, this paper will argue that, in order to also fight mafia phenomena, criminal law in Australia should focus on behaviours of organised crime groups rather than only on the criminalisation of proscribed associations and their illegal activities.

    June 13, 2016   doi: 10.1177/0004865816652367   open full text
  • Management, bullying and the work outcomes of Australian paramilitary.
    Brunetto, Y., Xerri, M., Shacklock, K., Farr-Wharton, B., Farr-Wharton, R.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. May 11, 2016

    This study compared the impact of perceived organisational support from management upon bullying of soldiers and police officers and their work outcomes (wellbeing, affective commitment and turnover intentions). Data from self-report surveys from 99 army personnel and 193 police officers were analysed using SEM. The results indicate that significant paths between most variables and perceived organisational support explained 6% of bullying (comprising intimidation and personal attacks). Together, (a) perceived organisational support and bullying explained almost a third (28%) of psychological wellbeing, (b) perceived organisational support, bullying and psychological wellbeing explained over two-thirds (68%) of affective commitment, and (c) bullying and affective commitment explained over half (53%) of turnover intentions. Also, bullying partially mediated the relationship between perceived organisational support and affective commitment. There were no significant differences between the two cohorts, except for perceived organisational support from management. Implications include that soldiers and police officers are likely to experience better workplace performance if management support is improved. Both soldiers and police undertake emotionally difficult tasks at times, and without adequate support, the stress of their jobs is likely to negatively impact their wellbeing and commitment. Poor perceived management support is not sustainable in the long-term without negative employee consequences.

    May 11, 2016   doi: 10.1177/0004865816647429   open full text
  • The influence of organizational and environmental factors on job satisfaction among security guards in Singapore.
    Nalla, M. K., Paek, S. Y., Lim, S. S.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. May 03, 2016

    This study examines the determinants of security guards’ job satisfaction in Singapore. Specifically, data gathered from 251 security guards and security supervisors are analyzed to assess how job and organizational characteristics such as autonomy, supervisory support, innovation, pay and benefits, and support from other employees (non-security) affect the participants’ job satisfaction. In addition, given the nature of their work that brings them in close contact with citizens, the authors examine to what extent the environmental factor of perceived citizens’ views of security guards helps explain the level of satisfaction. The findings suggest that job autonomy, pay and benefits, and perceived support from other employees in the organization are strong predictors of participants’ job satisfaction.

    May 03, 2016   doi: 10.1177/0004865816647995   open full text
  • BZP-'Party pills, populism and prohibition: Exploring global debates in a New Zealand context.
    Hutton, F.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. April 08, 2016

    In New Zealand, the debates surrounding legal highs have been developing for approximately a decade. New Zealand’s historical grappling with the problem of legal highs reflects a global problem in addressing the issues related to new psychoactive substances. The focus of this article is the prohibition of BZP-based party pills under the Misuse of Drugs (Classification of BZP) Amendment Act, 2008 (hereafter the 2008 Act). This article reports on a qualitative study of the banning of BZP-based party pills in New Zealand, using thematic analysis of the discourses contained in the 2007 Parliamentary Bill readings of the 2008 Act. Six key themes were identified from the bill readings: prohibition is not an effective way to deal with drug use; BZP has a ‘gateway effect’; availability and accessibility means young people can access BZP-PPs too readily; young people are at risk; BZP has contributed to establishing a pill popping culture in New Zealand; and BZP has the potential for harm/has a moderate risk of harm. The thematic analysis revealed that evidence was often not fully represented in parliamentary debates, and that many of the concerns raised about BZPPs could have been dealt with through regulation rather than prohibition. A punitive moral populism aimed at drug use and drug users was also identified, driven by fears of drug using groups, and the symbolism associated with drug use.

    April 08, 2016   doi: 10.1177/0004865816638906   open full text
  • 'Drug dogs unleashed: An historical and political account of drug detection dogs for street-level policing of illicit drugs in New South Wales, Australia.
    Lancaster, K., Hughes, C., Ritter, A.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. April 05, 2016

    This article provides an historical and descriptive account of the introduction and development of the use of drug detection dogs as a tool for street-level illicit drugs policing in one Australian jurisdiction, NSW. Within this account, the legal and political context in which drug detection dogs emerged and gained prominence is described. The introduction of drug detection dogs was contingent on the political imperatives at work throughout the 1990s in NSW, and the increased salience of both policing and illicit drugs issues at this time. In documenting the emergence of the use of drug detection dogs from the early 2000s, and the associated legal challenges and rapid legislative responses, the role of third sector organisations and the media in generating debate is notable. Debates concerning the dogs’ effectiveness emerged in the mid- to late-2000s, giving rise to anomalies between policy and evidence. The more recent legislative developments and public and political debate about drug detection dogs from 2012 to 2014 can be seen in light of this history. By taking a different view which situates decisions and events in their historical and political context, we begin to see the dynamic processes and contingency involved in the development and implementation of particular illicit drugs policing policies over time. As debate about drug detection dogs continues to play out, generating new insights into drugs policing policy processes is imperative.

    April 05, 2016   doi: 10.1177/0004865816642826   open full text
  • Just about everybody doing the business? Explaining 'cash-for-crash insurance fraud in the United Kingdom.
    Button, M., Brooks, G., Lewis, C., Aleem, A.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. March 21, 2016

    There is much international research on the different types of fraud committed by individuals and/or organised crime. There is, however, limited research on insurance fraud and a particular species of such fraud which has become known as ‘cash-for-crash’ fraud in the United Kingdom. In addition, there are very few published studies of fraudsters which actually draw upon interviews with them. This article bridges both of these gaps providing a focus upon ‘cash-for-crash’ fraudsters which is based upon empirical research drawn from six interviews with such offenders and a database of over 400 offenders built upon successful prosecutions of such cases in the United Kingdom. This article offers a profile of such offenders and presents insights into why and how some people might become involved in ‘cash-for-crash’ type frauds.

    March 21, 2016   doi: 10.1177/0004865816638910   open full text
  • Punishment and rehabilitation - Uneasy bedfellows under section 44 of the Crime and Courts Act 2013.
    Freer, E. A.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. March 18, 2016

    Over the last 25 years, community sentences have evolved significantly. However, throughout this period there has been a consistent theme of rehabilitation underpinning them. Section 44 of the Crime and Courts Act 2013 has set out, the author argues, to alter this by requiring that a punitive element is attached to a Community Order given under s177 Criminal Justice Act 2003 unless to do so would be ‘unjust in all the circumstances’. Considering the types of offenders for whom community penalties have been shown to be particularly useful in reducing recidivism, and the potentially high threshold of ‘unjust in all the circumstances’, it is argued that this requirement will compromise the strengths previously exhibited by Community Orders and considers why such a requirement may have been added.

    March 18, 2016   doi: 10.1177/0004865816638908   open full text
  • Police supervisors' work-related attitudes in China.
    Liu, J., Sun, I. Y., Wu, Y., Chang, Y.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. March 17, 2016

    While the past two decades have witnessed a fast growing of policing literature in China, officers' job-related attitudes remain severely under-researched. Using survey data collected from 212 police supervisors in a major Chinese city, this study examined the patterns of Chinese police officers' occupational attitudes toward selective enforcement, legal restrictions, community policing, and use of force, and factors that influence such attitudes. About half the respondents were in favor of legal restrictions, and the majority of officers supported the notions of selective enforcement, community policing, and use of force. Male, older officers, those who had no military experience, and officers who worked at field stations favored selective enforcement than their counterparts, whereas supervisor who were younger and worked at nonfield stations were more supportive for legal restrictions. Supervisors' role orientations toward law enforcement and order maintenance influenced their preference for community policing. Implications for future research and policy were discussed.

    March 17, 2016   doi: 10.1177/0004865816638907   open full text
  • Predictors of delinquency among adolescents and young adults: A new psychosocial control perspective.
    Curcio, A. L., Mak, A. S., George, A. M.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. January 28, 2016

    The present study examined whether a new psychosocial control model of youth problem behaviours, including additional variables of sensation seeking and peer risk-taking behaviour, could be expanded to explain delinquency in early and mid-late adolescence, and emerging early- and mid-young adulthood. We also explored the possible mediating role of peer risk-taking behaviours on conventional social control risk factors of parent attachment, school connectedness, and perceived seriousness of risk-taking behaviours with delinquency. Using a recently updated Australian self-report delinquency measure that can capture undetected antisocial behaviour among both adolescents and adults, a sample of 329 secondary school students (age groups 13–14 and 15–17, 50.6% female) and 334 university students (age groups 18–20 and 21–24, 68.4% female) in Canberra, Australia participated. The new psychosocial control model explained variance in delinquency with medium to large effect sizes, and beyond the original psychosocial control variables in all four age cohorts. Peer risk-taking behaviour explained the largest proportion of variance across all four age groups; its mediating role was partially supported. Impulsivity predicted delinquency among 13–20 years olds as did sensation seeking among 15–24 years olds, suggesting different, yet overlapping influences on developmental trajectories of delinquency.

    January 28, 2016   doi: 10.1177/0004865816628594   open full text
  • Re-framing 'counterfeit from a public health perspective: A case for fraudulent medicine.
    Bandiera, R., Marmo, M.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. January 12, 2016

    ‘Black market’ counterfeiters operating outside of authorised industry are often framed as the perpetrators of dangerous and defective medicines within legal pharmaceutical markets. However, the assumption that all medicines which deliberately violate regulatory standards and quality specifications have black market origins is ill conceived, as poor medicine quality can occur regardless of who the manufacturer of the medicine may be. This paper proposes a reframing of all pharmaceutical products which intentionally, or negligently, fail to comply with regulatory standards and which are then fraudulently depicted as being of standard, from ‘counterfeit’ to ‘fraudulent medicines’. This proposal is reinforced with examples from Australian law, where Australian pharmaceutical companies, who deliberately violated regulatory standards and produced defective and dangerous medicines, have been prosecuted using legislation designed to capture poor-quality counterfeit drugs. The paper argues that these corporate crimes should not be framed as ‘counterfeiting’ but as ‘frauds’, thus containing acts of ‘counterfeiting’ to existing intellectual property law and providing due recognition for all acts which defraud and cause harm to the consumer.

    January 12, 2016   doi: 10.1177/0004865815626768   open full text
  • 'Staff can't be the ones that play judge and jury: Young adults suggestions for preventing unwanted sexual attention in pubs and clubs.
    Fileborn, B.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. January 12, 2016

    This paper explores young adults' suggestions for preventing unwanted sexual attention in licensed venues. Despite emerging evidence that unwanted sexual attention and sexual violence are significant issues faced by young adults in the night-time economy, there has been little introduced in the way of preventative strategies or campaigns. Drawing on a mixed-methods research project undertaken in Melbourne, Australia, I contend that exploring young adults' suggestions for prevention is instructive in a number of ways. Young adults are the primary users of licensed venues and thus may provide insight into potential strategies for prevention. It can also illuminate the discursive positions that young adults draw on in talking about prevention and their understandings of unwanted sexual attention.

    January 12, 2016   doi: 10.1177/0004865815626962   open full text
  • Recent legal developments in Australia.
    Sarre, R.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. December 11, 2015
    There is no abstract available for this paper.
    December 11, 2015   doi: 10.1177/0004865815622326   open full text
  • How the prison-to-community transition risk environment influences the experience of men with co-occurring mental health and substance use disorder.
    Denton, M., Foster, M., Bland, R.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. December 10, 2015

    Previous research has established that people with severe mental illness and co-occurring substance use disorder leaving prison have multiple and complex health, social and economic challenges. How the criminal justice and mental health systems influence the individual prison-to-community transition experience of this population is less well understood. This paper draws on unique qualitative data from a study of 18 men with co-occurring severe mental illness and substance use disorder leaving prison in Queensland, Australia. A repeat in-depth interview method was used to explore the experiences of the men in prison just prior to release and at two points post-release. Two themes are discussed from analysis of interviews: "risk behaviour and relapse" and "once a criminal always a risk". The findings suggest that individual risk behaviour is structured within a transition risk environment that reduces individual agency, thus facilitating a vicious cycle of release, relapse and reincarceration.

    December 10, 2015   doi: 10.1177/0004865815620703   open full text
  • Predicting punitive attitudes to sentencing: Does the public's perceptions of crime and Indigenous Australians matter?
    Brookman, R. P., Wiener, K. K.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. December 09, 2015

    In English-speaking western cultures the punitive attitudes towards law-breakers is well documented. The present study examines the utility of predictors of punitive attitudes with online survey data obtained from a convenience sample of 566 Australian residents. After controlling for demographic variables, the study examines the utility of two theoretical models; the Crime–distrust model and the Racial–animus model, in predicting punitive attitudes. All three factors of the Crime–distrust model significantly predict punitive attitudes. The study extends the current literature through identifying the significance of negative perceptions of Indigenous Australians in predicting punitive attitudes to sentencing. Results suggest that community perception of Indigenous Australians is a significant predictor of punitive attitudes in addition to factors of the Crime–distrust model. Future research using a more representative sample of the Australian population is recommended to increase the confidence with which findings are interpreted.

    December 09, 2015   doi: 10.1177/0004865815620702   open full text
  • Theft on trial: Prosecution, conviction and sentencing patterns in colonial Victoria and Western Australia.
    Piper, A., Durnian, L.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. December 08, 2015

    From Ned Kelly to Waltzing Matilda, tales of thievery dominate Australia's colonial history. Yet while theft represents one of the most pervasive forms of criminal activity, it remains an under-researched area in Australian historical scholarship. This article draws on detailed inter-jurisdictional research from Victoria and Western Australia to elaborate trends in the prosecution, conviction and sentencing of theft in colonial Australia. In particular, we use these patterns to explore courtroom attitudes towards different forms of theft by situating such statistics within the context of contemporary commentaries. We examine the way responses to theft and the protection of property were affected by colonial conditions, and consider the influence of a variety of factors on the outcomes of theft trials.

    December 08, 2015   doi: 10.1177/0004865815620684   open full text
  • The impact of loose coupling on police effectiveness.
    Knight, G. M.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. December 07, 2015

    This paper discusses loose coupling within police organisations, and the implications for police effectiveness. It uses findings from a qualitative study involving semi-structured interviews of 121 personnel from New Zealand Police and Queensland Police Service. The study provided insights into the characteristics of loose coupling in police agencies. The paper discusses the implications of these characteristics for the effectiveness of police. It suggests that the perceptions employees hold of the performance management practices that police use influence the extent of loose coupling. This loose coupling has both positive and negative effects. It reduces the ability of senior management to control the behaviour of employees. However, lack of management control does not result in an organisational culture that tolerates poor performance. The study found that strong peer pressure exists within workgroups to support the team and show commitment to doing a good job.

    December 07, 2015   doi: 10.1177/0004865815620704   open full text
  • Lost in the detail: Prosecutors' perceptions of the utility of video recorded police interviews as rape complainant evidence.
    Westera, N. J., Powell, M. B., Milne, B.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. December 07, 2015

    This study explored the perceptions of ten Crown Prosecutors about the utility of police interviews as video evidence-in-chief for adult sexual assault complainants to determine how to improve these interviews. A themed analysis of prosecutors' responses indicated three major concerns about these interviews: the interviewer using wordy instructions, the lack of chronology and logical structure, and the relentless pursuit of unnecessary detail. These findings suggest that prosecutors' concerns are primarily due to police using cognitive interview methods that attempt to enhance the amount of detail recalled by a complainant. The authors discuss why generating large amounts of detail may be problematic in interviews with sexual assault complainants and provide recommendations for how police can adapt interview practices to better meet evidential needs.

    December 07, 2015   doi: 10.1177/0004865815620705   open full text
  • International students' fear of crime: an Australian case study.
    Xiong, L., Nyland, C., Sue Fisher, B., Smyrnios, K. X.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. October 26, 2015

    Concerns about safety and fear of being victimised by crime have become important factors determining international students’ decisions of where to study. Host governments and educational agencies have introduced a range of programs to ease such concerns. However, these recommendations are seldom informed by the criminology literature on fear of crime and the effectiveness of most of these practices has been rarely tested. Drawing upon a survey on 610 international students studying in Melbourne, Australia, during the period of 2009 and 2010, this paper finds that an overwhelming majority of international students have experienced racially oriented victimisation and have feared that they may be victimised because of their ethnic origin. Opportunities for socialization help international students feel safe about an environment, but it also increases their levels of fear of crime. Perceived social disorder makes international students feel unsafe and heightens their levels of fear of being victimised. Findings provide important implications for a range of stakeholders in countries that host international students.

    October 26, 2015   doi: 10.1177/0004865815608676   open full text
  • Exemplary prisoner management.
    Taylor, A., Rynne, J.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. October 01, 2015

    This paper focuses on the initiatives of a few idealistic prison managers in different countries who at different times braved the punitive tide to apply reformative principles. In support, it cites a growing number of compelling research studies from prisons and other places of confinement that bear on fair custodial management. It is presented in the hope of inspiring more managers to follow suit and to persuade administrators, personnel selectors, staff trainers, and others within the penal system to countenance systemic reform as their raison d'être. Following the halting progress of central and local governments in matters of penal reform, it could be seen as a third way of tackling a most vexatious humanitarian issue.

    October 01, 2015   doi: 10.1177/0004865815604194   open full text
  • Testing for cultural measurement equivalence in research on domestic and international tertiary students' fear of crime.
    Xiong, L., Nyland, C., Smyrnios, K. X.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. September 24, 2015
    Objectives

    Education institutions routinely instruct students on how to remain safe from crime. We hold that this instruction and much of the associated practice might be problematic, because none of the researchers who have contrasted the fears and the victimization avoidance strategies of domestic and international students have tested for cultural measurement equivalence. This study aims to examine, whether cultural measurement equivalence exists when domestic and international tertiary students respond to fear of crime-related measures.

    Methods

    This cross-sectional study involved 1170 tertiary students across four Melbourne-based universities, Australia. Multiple group confirmatory factor analyses with covariance and mean structures, using structural equation modeling, were used to test whether the same constructs were measured across international and local tertiary students.

    Results

    The two cohorts hold the same conceptual frame of reference when responding to the measurement items. However, the cohorts display different true score values in relation to a number of questionnaire items associated with fear of crime, perceptions of safety, and avoidance behavior.

    Conclusions

    This study suggests that researchers need to render testing for cultural measurement equivalence standard practice, when undertaking cross-cultural studies of student safety and that such practice should also be incorporated into student safety programs.

    September 24, 2015   doi: 10.1177/0004865815604197   open full text
  • Improving the law reform process: Opportunities for empirical qualitative research?
    Hanley, N., Fileborn, B., Larcombe, W., Henry, N., Powell, A.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. September 10, 2015

    Research on law reform has identified a variety of factors that help or hinder the reform process, but it has not systematically explored the role that empirical research plays and could play in enabling and enhancing law reform. Drawing on a series of qualitative interviews with criminal law reform experts in Victoria, we analyse the current uses and perceived value of empirical research in criminal law reform and explore opportunities for qualitative research methods to be used more systematically or extensively to improve criminal law reform processes and outcomes.

    September 10, 2015   doi: 10.1177/0004865815604195   open full text
  • Organisational culture and cultural change: A network perspective.
    Whelan, C.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. September 10, 2015

    Organisational culture is a complex and heavily contested concept. Not only is it difficult to define what organisational culture is, but it is also very difficult to analyse how it guides and constrains behaviour, and whether and how organisational cultures change. The central argument of this article is that organisational networks can effect cultural change and that the terms ‘structural’ and ‘relational’, which are commonly used to conceptualise the properties of networks, may also provide a useful conceptual framework for understanding cultural change. While there has been some attention directed to the effects of organisational culture for networks, there has been very little attention placed on the potential for networks to shape organisational culture. Based on a detailed qualitative study of networks in the field of ‘high’ policing in Australia, the article draws on interviews with senior members of police and security agencies to explore organisational culture and cultural change. The article puts forward a network perspective on cultural change and aims to advance our knowledge of how security nodes can experience cultural change as they work together in and through networks.

    September 10, 2015   doi: 10.1177/0004865815604196   open full text
  • Using environmental criminology theories to compare 'youth misuse of fire' across age groups in New South Wales.
    Pooley, K., Ferguson, C. E.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. July 27, 2015

    Youth misuse of fire is a substantive community concern. Despite evidence which indicates youths account for a significant proportion of all deliberately lit fires within Australia, an absence of up-to-date, contextually specific research means the exact scope and magnitude of youth misuse of fire within Australia remains unknown. Despite research suggesting commonalities exist between youth misuse of fire and juvenile offending more broadly, misuse of fire is rarely explained using criminological theory. In light of this gap, a descriptive analysis of youth misuse of fire within New South Wales was performed. Routine Activity Theory and Crime Pattern Theory were tested to explain differences in misuse of fire across age groups. Results suggest these environmental theories offer useful frameworks for explaining youth misuse of fire in New South Wales. It is argued that the Routine Activity Theory and Crime Pattern Theory can be employed to better inform youth misuse of fire policy and prevention efforts.

    July 27, 2015   doi: 10.1177/0004865815596794   open full text
  • An investigation of attitudes towards tax evasion and welfare fraud in New Zealand.
    Marriott, L.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. July 27, 2015

    This study undertakes an empirical exploration of attitudes towards tax evasion and welfare fraud in New Zealand. Prior research indicates that society has different attitudes towards these two crimes. However, it is not known why this is the case, particularly as both crimes are conceptually similar. The study has two aims. The first is to measure the extent to which society views tax evasion and welfare fraud differently in New Zealand. The second, and primary, objective of this research is to offer an explanation for why different views exist. The dual-process model, using social dominance orientation and right-wing authoritarianism is used for analytical purposes. Responses from 1500 survey participants show that New Zealanders do have different attitudes towards welfare fraud and tax evasion. In contrast to previous research findings, this study shows that harsher attitudes are held towards tax evasion than welfare fraud. Education and income level provide the greatest level of significance in explaining attitudes towards welfare fraud; and age and income source provide the greatest level of significance in explaining attitudes towards tax evasion.

    July 27, 2015   doi: 10.1177/0004865815596793   open full text
  • 'The Beast of Blenheim', risk and the rise of the security sanction.
    Pratt, J., Anderson, J.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. June 12, 2015

    This paper discusses and explains a new penal phenomenon in the main Anglophone societies – the rise of the security sanction. Rather than reacting to crime, its purpose is to protect public safety by reducing the risk of future crime. It can be applied to both the most serious offenders and those who have not committed any crime. It can involve extended/prolonged terms of imprisonment and it can involve extensive restrictions on movement in public space. Its emergence can be explained by the post-1980s political, economic and social restructuring of these societies and the attendant uncaging of risk.

    June 12, 2015   doi: 10.1177/0004865815590842   open full text
  • Young and unaffected by road policing strategies: Using deterrence theory to explain provisional drivers' (non)compliance.
    Bates, L., Darvell, M. J., Watson, B.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. June 09, 2015

    Newly licenced drivers are disproportionately represented in traffic injuries and crash statistics. Despite the implementation of countermeasures designed to improve safety, such as graduated driver licencing (GDL) schemes, many young drivers do not comply with road rules. This study used a reconceptualised deterrence theory framework to investigate young drivers’ perceptions of the enforcement of road rules in general and those more specifically related to GDL. A total of 236 drivers aged 17–24 completed a questionnaire assessing their perceptions of various deterrence mechanisms (personal and vicarious) and their compliance with both GDL-specific and general road rules. Hierarchical multiple regressions conducted to explore noncompliant behaviour revealed that, contrary to theoretical expectations, neither personal nor vicarious punishment experiences affected compliance in the expected direction. Instead, the most influential factors contributing to noncompliance were licence type (P2) and, counterintuitively, having previously been exposed to enforcement. Parental enforcement was also significant in the prediction of transient rule violations, but not fixed rule violations or overall noncompliance. Findings are discussed in light of several possibilities, including an increase in violations due to more time spent on the road, an ‘emboldening effect’ noted in prior studies and possible conceptual constraints regarding the deterrence variables examined in this study.

    June 09, 2015   doi: 10.1177/0004865815589824   open full text
  • Plea-negotiations, prosecutors and discretion: An argument for legal reform.
    Flynn, A.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. June 09, 2015

    Unlike the cynicism and accountability concerns applied to the use of discretion by police and judicial officers, prosecutorial discretion in plea-negotiations operates essentially free from external scrutiny or transparency. Globally, there is a scarcity of data and research on plea-negotiations, meaning we do not have the capacity to accurately measure their frequency, the contexts in which agreements are reached or to identify patterns in the types of offenders/offences most commonly involved. Additionally, in almost all Australian jurisdictions, plea-negotiations are not recognised as a legitimate legal process in statute, despite empirical evidence from the legal community suggesting their overtly encouraged and common use. Drawing from research in which 51 Victorian prosecutors were observed engaging in plea-negotiation practices over several months, and 54 interviews were conducted with prosecutors, defence counsel, judicial officers and policy advisors, this article intends to reignite discussions of the nontransparency of plea-negotiations in Australia, including highlighting the need for increased criminological research in this underexamined field. The article contends that all Australian jurisdictions should define plea-negotiations in legislation and record data on how often plea-negotiations occur, similarly to the current process of recording guilty pleas. Without such reform, plea-negotiations will remain nontransparent and misunderstood, as there will be no adequate mechanism to understand or examine how negotiations operate in practice or what their true impacts might be.

    June 09, 2015   doi: 10.1177/0004865815589823   open full text
  • Victimization among high school students in Thailand.
    Pradubmook-Sherer, P., Sherer, M.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. June 01, 2015

    Victimization rates in home, school, and community were studied, among high school students aged 13–18, in three regions of Thailand: Bangkok (urban region), the West (rural region), and the South (Muslim region). The random sample consisted of 1305 high school students: 542 (41.5%) males and 763 (58.5%) females. Results indicated that the southern provinces had the highest victimization rates in all the studied categories. Males were victimized more than females. The reasons behind these results are being dealt with in light of the political and cultural characteristics of Thailand. Recommendations to ease the victimization rates of youth in Thailand are suggested.

    June 01, 2015   doi: 10.1177/0004865815585389   open full text
  • Does parole supervision reduce the risk of re-offending?
    Wan, W.-Y., Poynton, S., Weatherburn, D.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. May 21, 2015

    Although a large number of offenders are released to parole each year, little is known about the effectiveness of parole supervision in reducing re-offending. The few studies that have been conducted provide mixed results and, for the most part, have been unable to rule out the possibility of selection bias. The present study is the first to evaluate the effectiveness of parole supervision using propensity score matching techniques. It compares two groups of offenders, carefully matched in terms of factors likely to affect re-offending but differing in terms of whether they are supervised. The results suggest that parole supervision does reduce the risk of re-offending.

    May 21, 2015   doi: 10.1177/0004865815585393   open full text
  • 'Real men don't hit women': Constructing masculinity in the prevention of violence against women.
    Salter, M.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. May 21, 2015

    The primary prevention of violence against women has become a national and international priority for researchers and policy makers. While optimistic about the potential of the prevention agenda, this paper advances two related critiques of the construction of masculinities within violence against women primary prevention in high-income countries. The first is that it affords gender norms an unjustified priority over gender inequality as determinants of violence against women. The second critique is that the myopic focus of violence against women prevention efforts on gender norms results in a ‘one-dimensional’ view of masculinity. Nationally and internationally prominent violence against women prevention activities are grounded in a view of masculinity as a normative phenomenon disembedded from economic and political processes. As the paper argues, such a sanitised and one-dimensional account of masculinity is unable to explicable the practical steps necessary to achieve the aims of primary prevention. The paper argues that primary prevention efforts should be reorientated away from decontextualised and quasi-transcendental accounts of masculinity and towards non-violence as a suppressed possibility within the existing social order, and one that requires economic and political as well as cultural change if it is to be realised.

    May 21, 2015   doi: 10.1177/0004865815587031   open full text
  • Durkheim's theory of anomie and crime: A clarification and elaboration.
    DiCristina, B.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. May 13, 2015

    In contemporary criminology, the proposal of a relationship between anomie and crime typically is traced to the work of Émile Durkheim. Yet, despite the prominence of anomie theory in this field, Durkheim’s theory of anomie and crime has not been carefully explicated and elaborated. Durkheim did not provide an extensive discussion of how anomie affects crime rates, and he certainly did not present anomie as the only cause of crime. Nonetheless, a careful examination of his rather elusive concept of anomie, together with a few small inferences, yields a relatively coherent theory of crime that differs from the popular interpretations of his work. The analysis begins with an inquiry into five different conceptions of anomie that can be abstracted from Durkheim’s writings. This is followed by an examination of what he implied regarding anomie as a cause of property crime, violent crime, and "juvenile crime." The final section explores the effects of anomie on criminal law—that is, on decisions to define and treat various actions as criminal. Unlike most contemporary anomie theories, Durkheim’s theory, as elaborated in this article, integrates a theory of crime causation with an account of criminal law.

    May 13, 2015   doi: 10.1177/0004865815585391   open full text
  • Responding to the needs of children of parents arrested in Victoria, Australia. The role of the adult criminal justice system.
    Flynn, C., Naylor, B., Fernandez Arias, P.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. May 11, 2015

    The prison population in most jurisdictions is escalating. As many prisoners are also parents, more children will inevitably be affected by the experience of having a parent incarcerated. Police and the lower courts are the gatekeepers of the criminal justice system and make urgent and vital decisions about arrest, remand and sentencing which have critical consequences for the children of those arrested, remanded and sentenced. To better understand how these children are responded to by this adult system, this paper draws on data collected from a purposive sample (N = 16) of Victorian magistrates, legal representatives and police, as part of a broader ARC funded study. Findings indicate that the consideration of these children by police and magistrates is largely ad hoc and depends on good will and the exercise of discretion. The balancing of justice issues and the interests of children is also complex and currently under-researched and under-informed. The authors argue that until the agencies dealing with adults incorporate child-focused practices, children, who have a primary carer in prison, will continue to be disadvantaged by a system which considers them only as collateral damage in the exercise of justice.

    May 11, 2015   doi: 10.1177/0004865815585390   open full text
  • Reflections on a long career in criminology.
    Biles, D.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. May 07, 2015

    On the occasion of receiving the Australian and New Zealand Society of Criminology Distinguished Criminologist Award, David Biles reflects on his long career in criminology and a number of criminal justice agencies. He reviews the establishment of the ANZSOC in 1967, suggesting that it was both premature and serendipitous. He notes particularly the central role of Allen Bartholomew at that time and for the next 13 years. He comments on the changing nature of the membership of ANZSOC and regrets the intellectual separation of academic criminologists and criminal justice professionals that has (perhaps unavoidably) developed. He offers some comments on the membership of the Society and its journal, and suggests a number of issues that he believes deserve more attention and research.

    May 07, 2015   doi: 10.1177/0004865815585394   open full text
  • Being a 'suspect community' in a post 9/11 world - The impact of the war on terror on Muslim communities in Australia.
    Cherney, A., Murphy, K.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. May 07, 2015

    The suspect community thesis has been used to explain how and why Muslims have become a stigmatised minority, subject to increased state surveillance and public discourse that constructs Muslims as a potential terrorist threat. Breen-Smyth (2014) argues that a suspect community is generated through national or state security policies and reproduced and reinforced by societal responses and social practices. This influences how Muslims perceive themselves as a suspect community and influences their support for counter-terrorism efforts. This paper will explore the ‘experiential consequences’ of Muslims being stigmatised and labelled as a suspect community and the perceptions this has generated among Muslims living in Australia. We examine how Muslims have reacted to being defined as a terrorist threat and the coping mechanisms they adopt to defend their religious beliefs given Islam is seen by authorities, the media and the public as justifying violence. This paper will explore these issues by reporting results from focus group data collected from Muslims living in Sydney, Brisbane and Melbourne (N = 104 participants in total). Results illustrate how being defined as a suspect community influences the appraisals Muslims have of themselves, their faith, their community and Australian authorities. Implications for counter-terrorism policies are also identified.

    May 07, 2015   doi: 10.1177/0004865815585392   open full text
  • Beyond the legal barriers: Institutional gatekeeping and real jury research.
    Horan, J., Israel, M.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. March 31, 2015

    Social science research must displace myth, anecdote, and judicial hearsay in directing reform of the jury system. Drawing on the experiences of researchers from commonwealth countries, we explore why it has been so hard to undertake research on real juries. We also identify how the legal and institutional "barriers" might be lifted to facilitate an evidence-based approach to jury reform.

    March 31, 2015   doi: 10.1177/0004865815577768   open full text
  • Does the threat of longer prison terms reduce the incidence of assault?
    Menendez, P., Weatherburn, D. J.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. March 24, 2015

    In a bid to reduce alcohol-related violence, the New South Wales Government recently proposed introducing mandatory minimum prison terms for assault. This article addresses the question of whether the threat of mandatory minimum penalties would reduce the incidence of assault. We exploit an earlier sentencing reform in New South Wales (the introduction of standard non-parole periods) in which longer minimum periods in custody were announced but never actually carried into effect. We use time series structural modelling to see whether assault rates in New South Wales were affected by the threat of more severe penalties. No evidence is found that the threat of longer prison terms had any effect on the incidence of assault in New South Wales. The article discusses the policy implications of this finding and concludes that liquor licensing policy is a more cost-effective policy instrument for dealing with alcohol-related violence than sentencing policy.

    March 24, 2015   doi: 10.1177/0004865815575397   open full text
  • A cultural constraints theory of police corruption: Understanding the persistence of police corruption in contemporary Indonesia.
    Buttle, J. W., Graham Davies, S., Meliala, A. E.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. March 06, 2015

    Despite a decade of reform, Indonesia’s police continue to be plagued by systemic corruption. This article examines the reasons for the persistence of police corruption by firstly establishing that corruption is rife and then discuses Indonesian police reform post-Suharto. The international understandings are explored with a view to developing a definition of police corruption that accounts for sociocultural and historical factors in Indonesia. There is an examination of the relevance of international theories of police corruption for Indonesia. It is argued that these theories are only partially applicable to Indonesia and the authors posit the ‘cultural constraints theory of police corruption’, which accounts for invitational, slippery slope, noble cause, and predatory theories, but recognizes the distinct nature of Indonesia.

    March 06, 2015   doi: 10.1177/0004865815573875   open full text
  • Offender case management: Reducing the rate of reoffending by Māori.
    Sullivan, T., McDonald, M., Thomson, S. T.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. March 06, 2015

    In New Zealand, the number of offenders who continue to commit crime after leaving prison or completing community-based sentences is high, with the likelihood of reoffending much higher for Māori. The Police, Iwi (Māori tribe) and the Department of Corrections (the New Zealand Government agency responsible for prisons and correctional facilities, community probation, and parole services) have set clear goals to reduce the level of crime and the rate of reoffending. A decrease in reoffending will benefit society in terms of reduced costs to the justice system, less crime, safer communities and fewer victims. There is growing international evidence that offender case management is effective at reducing reoffending. The collaborative approach brings together representatives from the justice system, local authorities and other organisations to work alongside offenders who are due for release from prison. This article presents the results of Project Kete, a joint initiative between A3K (an organisation that provides support for Māori clients), the Police and the Department of Corrections. Sixteen high-risk Māori offenders nearing the end of their sentences received intensive support and supervision to help them reintegrate into the community. The results are encouraging. All 16 offenders remained out of prison as at December 2014 – a 100% reduction in the expected reimprisonment rate – and the 1-year reconviction rate was 33% versus a predicted rate of 48%.

    March 06, 2015   doi: 10.1177/0004865815575398   open full text
  • Rethinking women's post-release reintegration and 'success'.
    Carlton, B., Segrave, M.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. March 03, 2015

    In this article, we interrogate three assumptions related to women’s post-release reintegration and success that are prevalent within and across official, institutional and criminological discourses and practice. Our analysis is based on qualitative interviews conducted with support workers and women about experiences and perceptions of support and success in Victoria, Australia. Ultimately, we contend that the introduction of women-specific policies and support programs in Victoria has had limited impact because they are at core premised upon the same problematic success-related assumptions that have failed to adequately serve mainstream prisoner populations, i.e. men. We issue a broader challenge to criminologists to rethink dominant understandings about post-release reintegration in the interests of facilitating alternative approaches that respond to the structural injustices that define the post-release trajectories of women and men.

    March 03, 2015   doi: 10.1177/0004865815573876   open full text
  • Unemployment, business cycles, and crime specialization: Canadian provinces, 1981-2009.
    Andresen, M. A., Linning, S. J.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. March 03, 2015

    The relationship between unemployment and crime is complex, consisting of two independent and counteracting effects: motivation and guardianship. The Cantor and Land model integrated these two effects leading to a new literature investigating the relationship between unemployment and crime. However, this literature always considers the impact of unemployment (or some other measure of the economy) on the volume or rate of crime. In this paper, we investigate the role unemployment plays in crime specialization on the Canadian provinces, 1981–2009. Using panel data and a hybrid modeling technique we find that unemployment impacts crime specialization, but this impact varies in magnitude and by crime type.

    March 03, 2015   doi: 10.1177/0004865815575395   open full text
  • Organized crime and illegal gambling: How do illegal gambling enterprises respond to the challenges posed by their illegality in China?
    Wang, P., Antonopoulos, G. A.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. February 25, 2015

    Since China initiated its economic reforms in 1978, illegal gambling has become the primary source of revenue for organized crime groups. However, there remains a startling paucity of literature on the subject. This paper provides the first scholarly account in English of Chinese illegal gambling organizations and examines how three major types of enterprising entities (local gambling dens, trans-regional gambling rings and online gambling networks) mitigate external uncertainties. Using Chinese- and English-language sources, it explores how gambling organizations develop strategies to achieve optimal efficiency in the face of substantial challenges, including finance, marketing, debt collection, and police suppression.

    February 25, 2015   doi: 10.1177/0004865815573874   open full text
  • Modern diversion or colonial hangover? The history and development of suspended sentences in South Australia.
    Smith, E.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. February 24, 2015

    Suspended sentences, although controversial, are used in most jurisdictions across Australia in some form, with most states and territories having introduced this sentencing option in the 1980s and 1990s. However, South Australia's legislation concerning suspended sentences is much older (having been introduced in 1969) and is also based on sentencing legislation that existed in the Victorian and Edwardian eras. This article will argue that because the legislation concerning suspended sentences in South Australia is much older (and based on even older legislation), the way that this sentencing option operates is much different from other Australian jurisdictions. Based on Victorian probation legislation, suspended sentences have a flexibility in South Australia, which has meant that other forms of alternative sentencing (such as community orders and home detention) are not used in the State.

    February 24, 2015   doi: 10.1177/0004865815570679   open full text
  • Lawyers' experiences with fitness to plead to summary offences.
    O'Carroll, B. L.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. February 19, 2015

    In a number of Australian jurisdictions the approach to the determination of fitness to plead to summary offences is very unclear. The Queensland Court of Appeal has discussed the issue that in Queensland there is no general legislation that deals with deciding if a person charged with a summary offence is fit to plead. This article reports on a study that was conducted to examine legal practitioners' experiences with the issue of fitness to plead to summary offences in Queensland. This article examines the fitness to plead to summary offences literature, presents and discusses some of the key findings from the study and offers suggestions for law reform. The themes examined in this article are legal practitioners' experiences and opinions on the legislative gap, what participants believe are the effects and consequences of not having legislation in this area and participants' recommendations for law reform. This research has relevance beyond Queensland as it is highly likely that this is an issue in other Australian jurisdictions.

    February 19, 2015   doi: 10.1177/0004865815570678   open full text
  • Tackling 'drug-related' crime: Are there merits in diverting drug-misusing defendants to treatment? Findings from an Australian case study.
    McSweeney, T., Hughes, C. E., Ritter, A.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. January 29, 2015

    This study sought to assess the impact of the pre-sentence Magistrates Early Referral Into Treatment (MERIT) diversion program in New South Wales, Australia on offending in the 12 months following exposure to the intervention. The comparative design involved an experimental group of 1017 defendants who exited the MERIT program in 2008 and a comparison group of 1017 offenders identified as drug misusers following completion of a Corrective Services’ risk and needs assessment and sentencing in a non-MERIT New South Wales Local Court during this period. Both groups were selected from a larger pool of cases (N = 3319) that were found to be significantly different on a number of key variables. Propensity score matching was used to deal with this non-equivalence. The outcome measures were: the rate, volume and seriousness of known re-offending. Recidivism risk factors were also examined for MERIT participants. There was no association between exposure to MERIT and reduced rates of reconviction at 12 months and group status did not make a significant contribution to the prediction of reconviction, when controlling for the influence of penalties imposed. The MERIT group had committed a larger number of offences during this period (including when adjustments were made for time at reduced risk due to imprisonment), but there were no differences in relation to changes in offence seriousness. Among MERIT participants, the factor with the largest effect on risk of recidivism was offence type. Completing the program had a significant protective effect against recidivism, while the number of prior court convictions increased this risk. These findings shed light on possible reforms to MERIT aimed at maximising the program’s crime prevention impact.

    January 29, 2015   doi: 10.1177/0004865814555773   open full text
  • Public trust in the Chinese police: The impact of ethnicity, class, and Hukou.
    Wu, Y., Sun, I. Y., Hu, R.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. January 21, 2015

    Under the shiny surface of continued rapid economic growth, China has become a country rife with discontent over social inequalities, providing a unique social laboratory for studying social divisions and public perceptions of the police. We extended the conflict perspectives developed in the West to China and became the first to simultaneously examine the effects of three most vital social stratification variables in China—ethnicity, social status, and hukou—on trust in the police. Using nationwide data, we found that ethnic minorities showed the same or higher levels of trust than the Hans, rural registers held more favorable views than urban registers, and self-identified social status emerged as the most important concept associated with conflict theory in explaining Chinese trust in the police. Findings provided important theoretical and policy implications of social stratification and policing in a country of rapid modernization.

    January 21, 2015   doi: 10.1177/0004865814554309   open full text
  • Evaluating relational repair work with infants and mothers impacted by family violence.
    Bunston, W., Eyre, K., Carlsson, A., Pringle, K.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. December 19, 2014

    This paper describes the delivery of a therapeutic infant/mother group work intervention program called The Peek-a-Boo ClubTM, which ran from mid-2005 until early 2012. It examines the importance of intervening early with infants and mothers impacted by family violence. The intervention used an ‘infant led’ approach to facilitate the repair of relational ruptures in the infant/mother attachment as a consequence of experiencing family violence. It provides an overview of the intervention and work undertaken to enhance the quality of the attachment between mothers and their infants. In particular, it presents the demographic data of 128 mothers and their infants who participated over a specific period (2007–2011) and then the results of a small quantitative pre- versus post-pilot evaluation of 30 groups over this same time period. Further qualitative data is also included. The challenges and complexities involved in collecting data from this ‘hard to reach’, ambivalent and vulnerable client group are discussed. The results of the evaluation indicate some limitations in the methodology, however, overall The Peek-a-Boo ClubTM program was associated with improved scores on outcome measures assessing infant, mother and infant–mother functioning. Though only a small study, it supports intervening early to assist mothers and infants impacted by family violence in order to repair relational disruption, and encourage mother’s availability to respond sensitively to their infant’s efforts in managing affect regulation. A more comprehensive, tailored and systematic evaluation of such interventions is recommended.

    December 19, 2014   doi: 10.1177/0004865814559925   open full text
  • Vietnamese Australians' perceptions of the trustworthiness of police.
    McKernan, H., Weber, L.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. December 10, 2014

    Trust is a central concern in the policing of ethnically and racially identified communities. A challenge for contemporary policing research on trust, as for related concerns such as confidence or cooperation, is to relate the quality of personal police trust encounters to public views about the trustworthiness of the policing institution. Within the criminological literature on policing, many quantitative empirical studies are directed towards the measurement and comparison of how confidence, trust, effectiveness and fairness are related to community perceptions of police practice. Overall, there is a general scarcity of integrated frameworks applied to empirical studies of trustworthiness although the organisation and leadership literature offer some models. In this qualitative study, a sociological framework is used to explore Vietnamese Australian's perceptions of police trustworthiness. The paper investigates the key factors that influence Vietnamese Australians' perceptions of police trustworthiness using dimensions of trustworthiness described by Sztompka, namely, reputation, performance, appearance and accountability.

    December 10, 2014   doi: 10.1177/0004865814554308   open full text
  • Gambling and drugs: The role of gambling among Vietnamese women incarcerated for drug crimes in Australia.
    Le, R., Gilding, M.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. December 09, 2014

    This study of 35 Vietnamese women imprisoned for drug crimes in Melbourne, Australia, demonstrates a strong association between problem gambling and illicit drug markets, notably heroin trafficking and cannabis cultivation. Specifically, problem gambling in Melbourne’s casino provided both the main motivation and the necessary network brokerage for drug-related crime. More generally, the study demonstrates the importance of socio-cultural dynamics in drug-related crimes: in particular, the social embeddedness of ethnic and immigrant participation in illicit drug markets through social relationships formed at the casino; the influence of the institution of informal lending choi hi; and women’s agency in drug markets, independently of their kinship and marital relations. The study also highlights the importance of minority perspectives in criminology, presenting an opportunity for policy officials to develop more finely-tuned interventions directed towards the articulation between gambling and drugs.

    December 09, 2014   doi: 10.1177/0004865814554307   open full text
  • The evolution of the Australian 'ndrangheta. An historical perspective.
    Sergi, A.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. December 08, 2014

    This paper explores the phenomenon of the ‘ndrangheta – a criminal organisation from Calabria, South of Italy and allegedly the most powerful among the Italian mafias – through its migrating routes. In particular, by focusing on the peculiar case of Australia, the paper aims to show the overlapping of migrating flows with criminal colonisation, which has proven to be a strategy of this particular mafia. The paper uses the very thin literature on the subject alongside official reports and newspaper articles on migration and crime, mainly from Italian sources, to trace an historical journey on the migration of people from Calabria to Australia in various moments of the last century. The aim is to present the evolution and growth of Calabrian clans in Australia. The topic is largely unexplored and is still underreported among Australian institutions and scholars, which is why the paper chooses an historical approach to describe the principal paths in this very new field of research.

    December 08, 2014   doi: 10.1177/0004865814554305   open full text
  • Taking the problem seriously? Sentencing Indigenous and non-Indigenous domestic violence offenders.
    Jeffries, S., Bond, C. E.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. November 17, 2014

    The ‘problem’ of Indigenous domestic violence has become increasingly dominant in populist and government discourse, with the criminal justice system (including the courts) being criticised for the possible lenient treatment of offenders. Using a population of cases sentenced in New South Wales from January 2009 to June 2012, this paper uses multivariate analyses to explore the intersection between Indigenous status, context of violence (domestic vs. nondomestic) and the imprisonment sentencing decision. Results suggest that when sentenced under comparable statistical circumstances, Indigenous domestic violence offenders are equally likely as those convicted of violent crimes outside of intimate/familial contexts to be sentenced to prison. In contrast, non-Indigenous domestic violence offenders are significantly less likely than those convicted of violent offences outside of intimate/familial relationships contexts to be sentenced to prison. Drawing on the focal concerns sentencing perspective, possible explanations for this finding are explored. The tension faced by the courts between the impact of colonialism on Indigenous offenders and their communities, the need to protect Indigenous victims of domestic violence and their communities, as well as overarching expectations around the punitive treatment of crimes of domestic violence are discussed.

    November 17, 2014   doi: 10.1177/0004865814554306   open full text
  • Intersections of Indigenous status, sex and age in sentencing decisions in the New South Wales Children's Court.
    McGrath, A.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. September 22, 2014

    The current study uses sentencing data from the New South Wales Children’s Court to examine the impact of Indigenous status, age and sex on two outcomes: custodial status at sentence and the imposition of a detention order. Indigenous youth aged 10–16 were more likely to be in custody at sentence net of controls, although the major determinants of custody status were the criminal history of the offender as well as the nature of the offences that had been committed. Age and sex but not Indigenous status were related to the imposition of a detention order, with 17- to 21-year-old males having the highest odds of imprisonment. It is argued that while disparities in justice processing are primarily determined by differences in offending history and profile, some evidence was observed to indicate these differences may in part be a cumulative phenomenon, with early decisions indirectly leading to the later over-representation of Indigenous individuals.

    September 22, 2014   doi: 10.1177/0004865814551614   open full text
  • Predictors and correlates of re-incarceration among Australian young people in custody.
    Indig, D., Frewen, A., Moore, E.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. September 19, 2014

    The aim of this paper is to describe the predictors and correlates of previous incarceration and re-incarceration among a sample of 319 young offenders in New South Wales, Australia. At baseline, most (78%) participants had been previously incarcerated and after 18 months follow-up, 50% of participants were re-incarcerated in either adult or juvenile custody. Significant correlates of any previous incarceration included heavy alcohol consumption, cannabis dependence, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder and possible borderline intellectual disability. Significant correlates of re-incarceration within 18 months included heavy drinking and using any cannabis. Heavy alcohol consumption and cannabis use are important risk factors for recidivism among young offenders. More research is needed to determine the nature of this association. Evidence-based interventions that address alcohol and cannabis use among this high risk population are needed.

    September 19, 2014   doi: 10.1177/0004865814550534   open full text
  • A comparative study of satisfaction with the police in the United States and Australia.
    Dai, M., Jiang, X.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. September 01, 2014

    This study comparatively examines three major models of citizens’ satisfaction with the police, using two similar community surveys on policing from Cincinnati, Ohio, USA and Queensland, Australia. It tests the wider applicability of the demographic model, the neighborhood condition model, and the prior contacts with police model and analyzes whether the effects of common determinants on citizens’ satisfaction remain the same across the two international samples. Results from a series of comparisons show that there is a substantial amount of similarity across statistical models for Cincinnati and Queensland, suggesting a general framework of citizens’ satisfaction with the police that could be generalized to other international contexts. Limitations and future directions of comparative research in this area are also discussed.

    September 01, 2014   doi: 10.1177/0004865814545684   open full text
  • Spatial patterns of violent crimes and neighborhood characteristics in Changchun, China.
    Liu, D., Song, W., Xiu, C.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. September 01, 2014

    Crime is one of the major concerns facing Chinese cities. Using crime data compiled at police precinct level in 2008, this research examines spatial patterns of violent crimes in Changchun, and explores the relationship between the spatial distribution of violent crimes and neighborhood characteristics. Crime rates are applied as a measure of the intensity of violent crimes. Spatial statistics and geographic information systems are used to detect violent crime hot spots, or statistically significant locales of high violent crime rates in Changchun. A multiple linear regression model is calibrated to assess the impacts of contextual neighborhood characteristics on violent crimes. The analytical results demonstrate that the risk or intensity of violent crimes is strongly concentrated in the central city area, and neighborhood socioeconomic, demographic, especially land use characteristics are effective in accounting for the spatial variation in the distribution of violent crimes across the city of Changchun. These findings are largely in line with the routine activities theory, social disorganization theory, and the framework of crime prevention through environmental design, which emphasize the importance of opportunities, local social context, and environmental design in shaping the spatial pattern of and reducing urban crimes.

    September 01, 2014   doi: 10.1177/0004865814547133   open full text
  • No place to run, no place to hide: Socio-organizational processes and patterns of inmate victimization.
    de Almeida, O. L., Paes-Machado, E.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. August 26, 2014

    This paper discusses the victimization patterns of inmates of the largest prison unit of Bahia. It uses data from a screening survey with 591 participants, which culminated in 107 semistructured interviews and direct observation. The study demonstrates that 54.3% of inmates report some type of material, physical, and psychological victimization. It asserts that those patterns are structured by institutional violence, jail arrangements, and criminal gangs in the prison. It also demonstrates the influence of the availability of economic, cultural, and social capital in the levels of vulnerability. It concludes that the drama of inmate victimization is a key to understand the dynamics of a prison system that is more dystopian than we can imagine.

    August 26, 2014   doi: 10.1177/0004865814545683   open full text
  • Stakeholders' perceptions of the benefit of introducing an Australian intermediary system for vulnerable witnesses.
    Powell, M. B., Bowden, P., Mattison, M.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. August 14, 2014

    Vulnerable witnesses (e.g. children and adults with communication impairment) face many barriers to testifying and achieving justice when participating in the criminal justice system. To date, reforms have been implemented in Australia to address these, yet the barriers remain. Several other countries have implemented an intermediary scheme, whereby an independent third party assists vulnerable witnesses to understand the questions and processes encountered during interviews and trials, and helps witnesses to be understood. This study provides a qualitative analysis of stakeholders' (N = 25 professionals) perceptions regarding the potential benefits of implementing an intermediary scheme in Australia. While all participants demonstrated an open-minded attitude to new reform in this area, their perspectives did not support the introduction of an intermediary scheme at this time. Stakeholders highlighted the need for improved use and effectiveness of current measures, and expressed concern about adding further complication to the system.

    August 14, 2014   doi: 10.1177/0004865814543391   open full text
  • 'The police are rottenly corrupt': Policing, scandal, and the regulation of illegal betting in Depression-era Sydney.
    Evans, R.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. August 14, 2014

    One groundbreaking aspect of the Wood Royal Commission into police corruption in New South Wales was to recognize the importance of the historical dimension of corruption. The historical consensus is that systemic police corruption emerged in NSW only after the Second World War but, as Wood acknowledged, there has been little detailed research into earlier periods. One window into policing in the 1930s is provided by the Markell Royal Commission, which investigated allegations of police misconduct in relation to illegal bookmaking in 1936. This article explores the evidence gathered by Markell, and argues that his inquiry uncovered a system of entrenched police corruption at a level of complexity previously thought not to have appeared for another decade. It is argued that poor management contributed to the growth of systemic corruption from the early 1930s, and that a defensive and negative reaction to the exposure of this corruption caused an historic opportunity for reform to be lost.

    August 14, 2014   doi: 10.1177/0004865814543392   open full text
  • Governing private security in New Zealand.
    Bradley, T.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. June 30, 2014

    The remarkable growth of private security has focused attention on the increased vulnerability to poor standards and malpractice among those now reliant upon it. A common international response to this increased risk has been the introduction and/or reform of ‘special’ industry regulation. New Zealand is no exception. Here, the Private Security Personnel and Private Investigators Act (2010) updated governing regulation first introduced in 1975. This article presents a critical assessment of the regulatory framework supplied by the Act and the form or modality of regulation it represents. Informed by original New Zealand research on the vexed issue of industry standards and professionalism the article contends that the new regulatory framework is insufficiently comprehensive in scope to achieve its primary aims of raising standards and reducing risk. The article, therefore, advocates a move beyond an exclusive dependence on a state centred ‘command and control’ approach that since the mid-1970s has proven largely unsuccessful and toward a more pluralistic, ambitious regulatory model within which the state constitutes just one, albeit significant, node or ‘site’ of governance.

    June 30, 2014   doi: 10.1177/0004865814538038   open full text
  • Achieving restorative justice: Assessing contrition and forgiveness in the adult conference process.
    Halsey, M., Goldsmith, A., Bamford, D.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. June 30, 2014

    This paper examines the key processes and outcomes of a pilot adult restorative justice programme initiated in one Australian state. We focus particularly on the methods used to ‘capture’ expressions of contrition and forgiveness in various conference settings. In addition, we examine the legal and procedural considerations arising from the pilot, and draw, importantly, on victim and offender narratives of ‘the conference experience’. In concluding, we note the substantive potential for restorative justice to play a meaningful role in adult contexts and briefly consider the future for initiatives of this kind.

    June 30, 2014   doi: 10.1177/0004865814538433   open full text
  • Sentencing and public confidence in Australia: The dynamics and foci of small group deliberations.
    Stobbs, N., Mackenzie, G., Gelb, K.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. June 25, 2014

    This study is the first of its kind in Australia to use the deliberative small group methodology to explore participants’ deeper, nuanced thoughts on specific criminal justice issues in order to gain insight into the underlying beliefs that influence people’s opinions on sentencing. The use of small group discussions allows an analysis of the dynamics of people’s interactions and the potential of these to elicit deeper, more thoughtful deliberation. Participants’ comments around two policy areas – mandatory sentencing and the use of alternatives to imprisonment – were founded on concerns about the need for judges to tailor the sentence to fit the specific circumstances of each case. The methodology itself has shown that people may change their initial opinions on complex issues when given the opportunity to discuss and reflect on their beliefs.

    June 25, 2014   doi: 10.1177/0004865814537652   open full text
  • Problem gambling among a group of male prisoners: Lifetime prevalence and association with incarceration.
    Riley, B., Oakes, J.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. June 24, 2014

    Studies have shown an association between criminal offending and problem gambling; however, research concerning problem gambling among prisoners is limited. Although reported prevalence rates are high among the offending population, different screening tools have been used making them difficult to compare. The purpose of this study was to investigate the lifetime prevalence of both level 2 and 3 problem gambling among a group of incarcerated male offenders in South Australia and to examine the relationship between gambling and current term of imprisonment. The Early Intervention Gambling Health Test (EIGHT Screen) was completed by 105 prisoners. Fifty-five (52%) indicated a lifetime prevalence of problem gambling. One-fifth of all respondents reported their current term of imprisonment was related to gambling. This paper aims to draw attention to the prevalence of problem gambling among Australian prisoners. Implications are discussed with regards to problem gambling, health promotion and rehabilitation, and the importance of screening for gambling-related problems among this high-risk population.

    June 24, 2014   doi: 10.1177/0004865814538037   open full text
  • The prison adjustment of Aboriginal offenders.
    Ruddell, R., Gottschall, S.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. June 19, 2014

    This study examined the misconduct of all 18,075 Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal offenders admitted to Canadian federal prisons between 2006 and 2009. We found that Aboriginal prisoners had a higher involvement in incidents of major and minor misconduct than their non-Aboriginal counterparts. Consistent with prior prison research, younger prisoners, males, and those with higher levels of risk and dynamic needs had higher involvement in misconduct as perpetrators. By contrast, prisoners who had participated in violence reduction or substance abuse programs were involved in fewer incidents. Both gang involvement and victimization were also robust predictors of prison misconduct. These findings can guide the development of programmatic responses to help offenders develop better skills to adjust to their incarceration and successfully reintegrate in the community following release from prison. Consistent with the Statistics Canada (2013) definition, Aboriginal refers to persons who are Status Indians, Métis peoples (people of mixed Indian and other ethnicities) and Inuit peoples (persons from the far North).

    June 19, 2014   doi: 10.1177/0004865814531152   open full text
  • The comparative context of collective efficacy: Understanding neighbourhood disorganisation and willingness to intervene in Seattle and Brisbane.
    Fay-Ramirez, S.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. June 19, 2014

    The collective efficacy literature provides a framework to understand how neighbourhood structure influences violence. Existing findings have been based largely on American cities where disadvantage and ethnic segregation are more concentrated. Thus, they are not always representative of other Western cities where structural disadvantage has a different history as well as less variation across neighbourhoods. This paper explores the comparative effect of collective efficacy in Seattle, USA, and Brisbane, Australia. Findings show that collective efficacy is a significant predictor of violent victimisation in both cities. However, in Brisbane, traditional measures of structural disorganisation are less of an influence on victimisation than in Seattle, and that collective efficacy as a neighbourhood process can exist and vary across neighbourhoods without extreme disorganisation.

    June 19, 2014   doi: 10.1177/0004865814536707   open full text
  • Criminal appellants' claims and appellate courts' answers: An empirical analysis of criminal appeals in Hunan province, China.
    Kuang, K., Liang, B.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. June 17, 2014

    To date, studies (especially empirical studies) on China criminal appeals are still rather limited, and most of them focused on the review mode, functions and values of appellate review, and correction of judicial judgments of the first instance. Based on 444 judicial documents rendered by appellate courts in Hunan Province, China, this study focuses on grounds raised by appellants and appellate courts’ answers, and addresses two specific questions: (1) what are grounds raised by criminal appellants in their appeals and how successful are they (measured by acceptance by appellate courts)? (2) How do appellate courts come to the final disposition decision, and are their dispositions subject to influences of systematic factors? Our analyses found that the nature of a comprehensive review in criminal appeals and discretional power possessed by Chinese judges affected both defendants’ appeals and appellate judges’ responses. Only three variables (the number of grounds accepted by appellate courts, the number new mitigating factors found by the courts, and the presence of attorneys) were found to have significantly impacted the final disposition. This empirical inquiry sheds light on the practice of criminal appeals in general.

    June 17, 2014   doi: 10.1177/0004865814537653   open full text
  • Does the birth of a first child reduce the father's offending?
    Theobald, D., Farrington, D. P., Piquero, A. R.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. June 17, 2014

    A little investigated correlate of persistence and desistance is the effect of parenthood. Research suggests that for females particularly, parenthood plays an important role but the evidence for males is mixed. Yet, prior studies have not considered potential selection effects. This paper seeks to overcome this limitation by examining the effects of having a child on offending using propensity score matching, with data from the Cambridge Study in Delinquent Development, a longitudinal study of 411 South London males followed since childhood. Findings indicate that, while there are reductions in offending from several years before the child’s birth to several years after the child’s birth, the effects are not large. Further analyses examining ‘shotgun’ marriages show that reductions in offending are larger than for non-‘shotgun’ marriages. Also, if a man remains with the child for at least five years, then reductions in convictions are greater than when he does not.

    June 17, 2014   doi: 10.1177/0004865814537840   open full text
  • Populism and criminal justice policy: An Australian case study of non-punitive responses to alcohol-related violence.
    Quilter, J.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. June 09, 2014

    Populism is widely regarded in the literature as a negative and inherently punitive influence on criminal justice policy. This article challenges this view and highlights the ways in which populism can produce forms of citizen engagement in the criminal justice context that are new and progressive. These possibilities are illustrated through a close analysis of the responses to a single instance of ‘random’ fatal violence: the killing of Thomas Kelly in King’s Cross, Sydney, in 2012. This case study shows how a populist campaign powerfully realigned political allegiances to call for, and achieve, real and enduring action from the New South Wales Government in addressing alcohol-related violence.

    June 09, 2014   doi: 10.1177/0004865813519656   open full text
  • Habitual criminal legislation in New Zealand: Three years of three-strikes.
    Oleson, J. C.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. June 05, 2014

    Habitual felon legislation is not new, but during the last 20 years it has become a powerful instrument of penal populism. Since passage of California's landmark 1994 three-strikes initiative, more than 100,000 offenders have been incarcerated in that state, contributing to prison crowding so serious that, in 2011, in Brown v. Plata, the United States Supreme Court ordered California to reduce its prison population by 46,000 persons. While the Californian three-strikes law is unusually draconian, habitual offender legislation also has been enacted in Australia and, more recently, in New Zealand. While little official data are available about New Zealand’s three-strikes law, preliminary analysis indicates that minority groups are overrepresented in the three-strikes population, and that three-strikes demographics resemble those of the New Zealand general prison population.

    June 05, 2014   doi: 10.1177/0004865814532660   open full text
  • Perceptions and profiles of interviews with interpreters: A police survey.
    Wakefield, S. J., Kebbell, M. R., Moston, S., Westera, N.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. May 22, 2014

    Policing organisations across the developed world increasingly need language interpreters to communicate with non-native speaking people. Little research has investigated police perceptions of using interpreter services, despite their growing need, documented concerns and lack of a widely accepted best practice. A survey of 413 police officers documented interpreted interviews in Australia and assessed police perceptions of those interviews. Interviews carried out by police included a higher number of suspect interviews and interviews via telephone interpreters. Cases more often involved sexual assault, assault and domestic violence. Indigenous people, victims and witnesses were identified as potentially vulnerable to not being provided interpreters. Police views on the use of interpreting services were generally positive; however, length of interviews, cost and inadequate training were identified as potential deterrents. Implications for police are discussed, as are ways to reduce negative police perceptions, create informed guidelines and improve interpreting service use.

    May 22, 2014   doi: 10.1177/0004865814524583   open full text
  • Optimising the length of random breath tests: Results from the Queensland Community Engagement Trial.
    Mazerolle, L., Bates, L., Bennett, S., White, G., Ferris, J., Antrobus, E.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. May 22, 2014

    Research suggests that the length and quality of police–citizen encounters affect policing outcomes. The Koper Curve, for example, shows that the optimal length for police presence in hot spots is between 14 and 15 minutes, with diminishing returns observed thereafter. Our study, using data from the Queensland Community Engagement Trial (QCET), examines the impact of encounter length on citizen perceptions of police performance. QCET involved a randomised field trial, where 60 random breath test (RBT) traffic stop operations were randomly allocated to an experimental condition involving a procedurally just encounter or a business-as-usual control condition. Our results show that the optimal length of time for procedurally just encounters during RBT traffic stops is just less than 2 minutes. We show, therefore, that it is important to encourage and facilitate positive police–citizen encounters during RBT at traffic stops, while ensuring that the length of these interactions does not pass a point of diminishing returns.

    May 22, 2014   doi: 10.1177/0004865814532661   open full text
  • Older prisoners: Challenges for inmates and prison management.
    Trotter, C., Baidawi, S.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. May 13, 2014

    There is considerable evidence pointing towards the growth of older prisoner populations in Australia. This article presents findings from the first large-scale study of older prisoners in Australia (N = 173), examining functional independence, aspects of the prison environment which present difficulties for less able older prisoners, the uptake of prison programs and social functioning from the perspective of older prisoners. Results indicate that 22% of prisoners aged 50 years and older required assistance in day-to-day tasks, and that bunks, stairs and bathroom facilities presented the greatest difficulties for older inmates. The majority of older prisoners (77%) engaged in prison work and approximately one half of those nearing release had attended offending behaviour programs. Prisoners aged 65 years and older were more likely to describe social disconnection, were more likely to be experiencing functional impairments and victimisation in prison, and those experiencing functional impairment were more likely to report feeling unsafe in prison compared to prisoners aged 50 to 64 years. Implications for corrections planning and prison management are discussed.

    May 13, 2014   doi: 10.1177/0004865814530731   open full text
  • Questioning the validity of criminal profiling: an evidence-based approach.
    Chifflet, P.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. May 12, 2014

    Criminal profiling is used in complex investigations, and, in a number of jurisdictions, as expert evidence in criminal trials. This article seeks to move beyond the many anecdotal accounts of success by profilers and examine the evidence available as to the discipline's validity. As it stands, profiling is based on theories that are uncertain at best, and little research has been undertaken to assess the actual accuracy of generated profiles. This absence of validation is in part due to genuine difficulties associated with designing appropriate testing models. It is exacerbated by the reluctance of profilers to engage in such a process, relying instead on the well-rehearsed, yet somewhat circular argument that the continuing demand for profiling advice is in itself reassuring evidence of the method's validity. It is the lack of objective evidence of validity in this area that will be critically considered in this article.

    May 12, 2014   doi: 10.1177/0004865814530732   open full text
  • Evaluation of Operation RESET: An initiative for addressing child sexual abuse in Aboriginal communities.
    Mace, G., Powell, M. B., Benson, M.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. May 01, 2014

    This paper presents a qualitative evaluation of Operation RESET: a multi-agency child protection strategy for remote Western Australian Aboriginal communities. RESET is a proactive engagement strategy involving a mobile multi-disciplinary specialist child abuse team comprising detectives and social workers. It is underpinned by the principles that preventing and responding to child sexual abuse must be a shared responsibility, address the underlying causes and contextual issues and enhance children's safety and well-being by empowering families and communities. The evaluation procedure consisted of in-depth interviews with 64 stakeholders of various backgrounds and affiliations who lived or worked in regions where RESET had been deployed for the past 18 months. Collectively, the interviews revealed strong support for Operation RESET's implementation and outcomes. Stakeholders highlighted four elements as being valuable components of the reform: the programme's proactive outreach approach, dedication to capacity building, holistic focus and the establishment of relationships that facilitated trust. These findings are discussed within the broader literature and suggestions for further research are offered.

    May 01, 2014   doi: 10.1177/0004865814524217   open full text
  • Beyond the 'sext': Technology-facilitated sexual violence and harassment against adult women.
    Henry, N., Powell, A.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. May 01, 2014

    Young people's use of technology as a tool for the negotiation of their sexual identities and encounters has increasingly become a focal point in popular and scholarly discussion. Much of this debate centres on the sending of explicit sexual images and/or video (‘selfies’ or ‘sexting’) by mobile phone, email or social media. In Australia and elsewhere, legislative frameworks have arguably over-regulated or criminalised young people's consensual, digital, sexual communications. Equally, the law has failed to respond to the harm that is experienced by victims of non-consensual making and/or distribution of such sexual images. In this paper, we examine the non-consensual creation and distribution of sexual images in the context of harassment, stalking and family or intimate violence. We argue that harmful digital communications are often framed as a problem of user naiveté rather than gender-based violence. Moreover, we argue that current legal and policy approaches fail to adequately capture the social and psychological harm that results from the use of sexual imagery to harass, coerce or blackmail women. We draw on preliminary data from a larger project investigating adult women's experiences of technology-mediated sexual violence and harassment.

    May 01, 2014   doi: 10.1177/0004865814524218   open full text
  • The convert, the remorseful and the rescued: Three different processes of desistance from crime.
    F.-Dufour, I., Brassard, R.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. April 15, 2014

    One of the key issues in research on criminal desistance is the impossibility of stating with any degree of certainty that an offender's criminal career is in fact over. When no clear demarcation line can be established for the precise moment when criminal activity has ended, researchers instead distinguish between the cessation of criminal behaviour and the process of desistance. A second issue lies in the contradictions inherent in explanatory theories on desistance that focus either on agents or, conversely, on the structures that provoke and support the process of change. An integrative theoretical framework on criminal desistance, influenced by the work of Margaret Archer (1995, 2000, 2002) and showing the interplay between structures and agents, can be found elsewhere (F.-Dufour, Brassard, and Martel, forthcoming). The application of this framework to empirical data collected from 29 Canadian offenders serving conditional sentences reveals the existence of three distinct processes leading to desistance among those we metaphorically call the transformed, the remorseful and the rescued.

    April 15, 2014   doi: 10.1177/0004865814523972   open full text
  • The spatial concentration of bias: An examination of the community factors that influence residents' perceptions of bias crime.
    Sydes, M. L., Wickes, R. L., Higginson, A.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. April 11, 2014

    Emerging scholarship indicates that bias crimes are concentrated in particular types of places. Currently, only a small number of studies consider the ecological factors that influence official reports of bias crime. Results from these studies indicate that the community processes and structures associated with the occurrence of non-bias crime may operate differently for bias crime. We use administrative and survey data from approximately 4000 residents living across 148 communities in Brisbane, Queensland to examine the ecological drivers of bias crime. Using multi-level logistic regression, we examine the community and household factors associated with residents’ perceptions of bias crime. Here, we focus not only on the structural demographics of the community, but also on the degree to which community cohesion influences whether or not residents perceive bias crime as a problem in their community. We find that poverty and ethnic diversity are positively associated with residents’ perceptions of bias crime. Further, residents living in communities with higher levels of community cohesion are less likely to perceive bias crime as a problem in their community. The level of community cohesion fully mediates the impact of ethnic diversity and partially mediates the effect of poverty on residents’ perceptions of bias crime.

    April 11, 2014   doi: 10.1177/0004865814522638   open full text
  • Degrees of difference? A preliminary study of criminology degrees at Australian universities.
    Bartels, L., McGovern, A., Richards, K.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. April 02, 2014

    While the discipline of ‘criminology’ has existed within Australian universities for more than half a century, the introduction of discrete ‘criminology’ and justice programmes is much more recent. Little is known, however, about the current state of play when it comes to what a degree in ‘criminology’ actually entails. With growing student enrolments in such programmes, reflecting on the status of these programmes is important in the context of student and employer requirements and expectations. Drawing on the findings of a preliminary study, this paper will explore what it means to study for an undergraduate degree in ‘criminology’ in Australia. Specifically, we will focus on the content, availability and range of ‘criminology’ and justice degrees available in Australia, in order to gain a better understanding of the convergences and divergences across degree programmes, and make some recommendations for future research.

    April 02, 2014   doi: 10.1177/0004865814523437   open full text
  • There is 'hope for you yet': The female drug offender in sentencing discourse.
    Mann, M., Menih, H., Smith, C.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. March 31, 2014

    Language and gender research has, in recent years, emphasised the importance of examining the context-specific ways in which people ‘do gender’ in different situations. In this paper, we explore how women involved in drug offences, specifically methamphetamine manufacture offences, are constructed within the language of the courts. Thirty-six sentencing transcripts from the New Zealand courts were examined to investigate how such offences, committed by women, are understood. In order to explore the representation of female offenders, a critical discourse analytic approach was adopted. Such an approach recognises that linguistic modes not only create and legitimise power inequalities but also embody a specific worldview. Three gendered discourses were identified in the sentencing texts: (i) the discourse of femininity, reinforcing the socially prescribed female role; (ii) the discourse of aberration, concerning women who breach traditional gender role expectations and, (iii) the discourse of salvation, presenting aberrant women with an opportunity to become ‘good’ women once again. The findings illustrate the ways in which processes of gendering take place within a specific community of practice: the courtroom.

    March 31, 2014   doi: 10.1177/0004865814523436   open full text
  • Rehabilitation and prison social climate: Do 'What Works' rehabilitation programs work better in prisons that have a positive social climate?
    Harding, R.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. March 28, 2014

    The ‘What Works’ literature has established that prison-based rehabilitation programs can reduce post-release re-offending rates amongst some offenders. Validated tools for measuring prison social climate have reliably identified regime factors that tend to make the prison experience less negative for prisoners. Experience in other human service areas would suggest that programs delivered in a positive prison social climate should be more effective than those delivered in a negative climate. However, the two lines of research exist in parallel without directly intersecting. This article examines research evidence that is laterally or tangentially relevant. The conclusion is that it would be perverse to structure penal administration policies around the view that a positive prison social climate cannot make any difference to re-offending rates. The evidence is that a good prison social climate would seem likely, other things being equal, to improve the outcomes achievable through proven ‘What Works’ rehabilitation programs. The research methodology to establish this correlation is complex. The article concludes by addressing these complexities and suggesting a viable methodology.

    March 28, 2014   doi: 10.1177/0004865813518543   open full text
  • Online frauds: Learning from victims why they fall for these scams.
    Button, M., Nicholls, C. M., Kerr, J., Owen, R.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. March 28, 2014

    Online frauds have become a major problem in many countries with millions of victims from a wide diversity of scams committed in full or part online. This paper explores the extent and nature of this problem. Using data from depth interviews with 15 online fraud victims, 6 focus groups with a further 48 online fraud victims and interviews with 9 professional stakeholders involved in combating this problem. The paper explores why victims fall for online scams. It identifies a range of reasons including: the diversity of frauds, small amounts of money sought, authority and legitimacy displayed by scammers, visceral appeals, embarrassing frauds, pressure and coercion, grooming, fraud at a distance and multiple techniques.

    March 28, 2014   doi: 10.1177/0004865814521224   open full text
  • The pursuit of exclusion through zonal banning.
    Palmer, D., Warren, I.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. March 25, 2014

    In recent years, a growing emphasis has been placed on the use of zonal banning to address violence and anti-social behaviour associated with alcohol consumption. While we recognise the longer historical links between territory and crime, this article focuses on recent efforts to govern territory through new zonal regulations. Recent processes in Australia involve the conflation criminal law principles with processes of managing order in and around private spaces through new administrative approaches to alcohol-related law enforcement. The article outlines the nature of sub-sovereign ‘police laws’ and the extent to which they have been used based on Victorian data. We conclude by suggesting these developments need ongoing critical scrutiny given evidence of the ongoing expansion of proprietary-based principles in the management of urban disorder, and the potential for these developments to promote the increased use of surveillance technologies to exclude undesirable populations from the night-time economies of Australian cities.

    March 25, 2014   doi: 10.1177/0004865813514064   open full text
  • Prosecutors' perspectives on using recorded child witness interviews about abuse as evidence-in-chief.
    Burrows, K. S., Powell, M. B.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. March 18, 2014

    Over the past two decades, numerous English-speaking countries have implemented legislative reform to allow children’s investigative interviews about abuse to be electronically recorded and made available for use as evidence-in-chief at trial. Prior evaluations suggest that the procedure has both advantages and disadvantages for prosecutors. This study adopted a constructive approach by eliciting contemporaneous and detailed feedback from 19 Crown prosecutors about the challenges of using electronically recorded interviews as evidence-in-chief and suggestions for how these challenges may be addressed. Thematic analysis revealed concerns in several areas; (a) the quality of questioning in interviews, (b) the jurors’ engagement with the witness, (c) the sense of formality and solemnity of evidence, (d) the clarity of the evidence and (e) the child’s preparedness for cross-examination. These themes are discussed within the context of the broader child testimony literature and recommendations for improvement are offered.

    March 18, 2014   doi: 10.1177/0004865814522821   open full text
  • Imprisoned Indigenous women and the shadow of colonial patriarchy.
    Baldry, E., Cunneen, C.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. March 17, 2014

    Imprisonment in Australia has been a growing industry and large numbers of vulnerable people find themselves in a state of serial incarceration. Women and Indigenous peoples in particular have experienced rapidly expanding imprisonment rates over recent decades. Our argument in this article is relatively straightforward: to understand contemporary penal culture and in particular its severity and excess in relation to Indigenous people and women, we need to draw upon an understanding of the dynamics of colonial patriarchy. We develop this understanding through a specific focus on Indigenous women. Although at a micro level, specific legislation and policy changes have had a negative impact on the imprisonment of vulnerable groups, it is within a broader context of the strategies and techniques of colonial patriarchy that we can understand why it is that particular social groups appear to become the targets of penal excess.

    March 17, 2014   doi: 10.1177/0004865813503351   open full text
  • The impact of community notification on the management of sex offenders in the community: An Australian perspective.
    Whitting, L., Day, A., Powell, M.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. March 17, 2014

    Western Australia recently passed legislation that allows information about convicted sex offenders to be disclosed to the general public. After critically appraising the rationale behind community notification, this paper considers its impact on offenders’ reintegration into the community and their subsequent risk of reoffending, its potential deterrent effect and usefulness as a management tool, and implementation issues. This discussion identifies several factors that potentially moderate the effectiveness of community notification schemes and some directions for future research and the development of policy and practices in this area.

    March 17, 2014   doi: 10.1177/0004865813503349   open full text
  • Psychopathic traits and ethnicity in female youths.
    Pechorro, P. S., Poiares, C., Vieira, R. X., Nunes, C., Jesus, S. N.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. March 17, 2014

    The aim of the present study was to analyze the differences regarding psychopathic traits and related constructs in female youths of diverse ethnic backgrounds. Using a sample of 88 young females from the Juvenile Detention Centers of the Portuguese Ministry of Justice (white Europeans group: n = 44, ethnic minorities group: n = 44), and a sample of 130 young females from the schools of the Lisbon region (white Europeans group: n = 65, ethnic minorities group: n = 65) results showed that almost no differences were found within the forensic group and the school group. Independently of ethnic group membership, psychopathic traits scores were significantly associated with behavioral problems, conduct disorder, self-reported delinquency, crime seriousness, age of crime onset, and age at first trouble with the law.

    March 17, 2014   doi: 10.1177/0004865813503840   open full text
  • Screening clients in a decriminalised street-based sex industry: Insights into the experiences of New Zealand sex workers.
    Armstrong, L.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. March 17, 2014

    This article explores the screening practices employed by sex workers to negotiate risks of violence from clients while working on the streets in New Zealand. Drawing from qualitative interviews with 28 street-working women, this article provides an insight into the strategies used to screen for danger when individuals approach as potential clients. In this article, I outline the nature of screening strategies described by the women interviewed, and discuss the broader meaning and purpose of these techniques in the context of mainstream representations of street-based sex work. The significance of the decriminalisation of street-based sex work on the screening strategies the women described is discussed and I argue that this legislative framework simplifies the process of screening and better supports the safety and wellbeing of sex workers.

    March 17, 2014   doi: 10.1177/0004865813510921   open full text
  • Good behaviour bonds and re-offending: The effect of bond length.
    Poynton, S., Weatherburn, D., Bartels, L.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. January 13, 2014

    The aim of this study was to examine the effectiveness of good behaviour bonds in reducing re-offending. Data on 19,478 individuals who received a good behaviour bond under section 9 of the Crimes (Sentencing Procedure) Act 1999 (NSW) for their principal offence were examined. Propensity score matching techniques were used to match offenders who received a bond of less than 24 months with offenders who received a bond of 24 months or more. These two matched groups were then compared on time to first new offence. After matching offenders on a large range of factors, time to reconviction was longer for offenders placed on bonds 24 months or longer compared with offenders placed on shorter bonds. A significant effect of bond length on re-offending was apparent for both supervised and unsupervised orders. The evidence presented here tentatively suggests long bonds are more effective in reducing re-offending than short bonds.

    January 13, 2014   doi: 10.1177/0004865813504769   open full text
  • The monetary cost of offender trajectories: Findings from Queensland (Australia).
    Allard, T., Stewart, A., Smith, C., Dennison, S., Chrzanowski, A., Thompson, C.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. November 07, 2013

    This study assessed the longitudinal costs of offender trajectories in Queensland (Australia) to provide policymakers with evidence that could be used to promote the use of crime prevention programs. Few studies have assessed these costs and minimal research has been conducted outside the United States. The study addressed three research questions: (1) What are the monetary costs of crime? (2) What is the optimal number of offender trajectories in an Australian offender cohort? and (3) What are the monetary costs of officially recorded offending for individuals on different offender trajectories? The Semi-Parametric Group-based Method (SPGM) was used to determine the number of offender trajectories in the Queensland Longitudinal Database. This database included 41,377 individuals who were born in 1983 and 1984 and guilty of offences in Queensland that were committed when aged 10–25 years old. The costs of crime were assessed using two approaches. First, criminal justice system costs were estimated based on the number and type of contacts that individuals had with the criminal justice system as well as the length of any supervision served. Second, wider social and economic costs were assessed based on offence type. Results indicated that there were five offender trajectories, including two chronic, one moderate and two low trajectories. When costs were applied to the offender trajectories, offenders in the two chronic groups were 4.8% of the cohort but accounted for 41.1% of the total costs. On average, each chronic offender cost between $186,366 and $262,799 by the time they turned 26 years old, with 60% of the costs accounted for by the criminal justice system. On average, each chronic offender cost over 20 times more than offenders in the two low offending groups. These findings provide further evidence for the potential benefits of implementing interventions that target chronic offenders.

    November 07, 2013   doi: 10.1177/0004865813503350   open full text
  • 'The right people to do the right job...': Legitimation Work of Municipal Corporate Security Personnel.
    Walby, K., Lippert, R., Wilkinson, B.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. October 21, 2013

    Corporate security units have emerged in municipal governments across North America. They resemble corporate security units found in private corporations, yet they are publically funded. Presently little is known about how the work of municipal corporate security units differs from that of public police, private contract security, or corporate security in the private sector. Though previous research has examined attitudes of public police toward private contract security, and vice versa, corporate security attitudes have been overlooked, as has how public sector corporate security personnel compare themselves to their counterparts in private corporations. This article extends analyses of ‘legitimation work’ of security and policing agents by examining what MCS personnel claim about public police, private corporate security, and private contract security. We show that MCS personnel claim the public police officers have a different skill set and possess limitations that MCS units overcome; that private corporate security is said to be driven more by a profit motive and is less accountable; and that private contract security agents have less expertise and are of lesser value than MCS personnel. Finally, we explore implications of this study for future research in policing and security.

    October 21, 2013   doi: 10.1177/0004865813502029   open full text
  • The right to silence: Inferences and interference.
    Daly, Y. M.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. August 29, 2013

    The right to silence, or the privilege against self-incrimination, has long been recognised as an important procedural protection for the accused in the criminal process. The legislature of New South Wales, however, has introduced legislation to curtail that right by allowing for adverse inferences to be drawn at trial from the pre-trial failure of the accused to mention a fact later relied on in his defence. This article considers this legislative change in comparative context, drawing on the experience of interference with the right to silence in the Republic of Ireland, in England and Wales and in the judgments of the European Court of Human Rights. Particular attention is paid to the interaction between the right to silence and the right to legal advice, including the issues of duty solicitor schemes, legal professional privilege and suspect reliance on advice to remain silent.

    August 29, 2013   doi: 10.1177/0004865813497732   open full text
  • Jurors' views of suspended sentences.
    Warner, K., Spiranovic, C.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. August 28, 2013

    This article examines jurors’ views on sentencing from trials returning guilty verdicts where the offender has been sentenced to a wholly suspended sentence or where jurors have suggested a wholly suspended sentence as the most appropriate sentencing outcome. It challenges the poor public image of suspended sentences and provides further evidence that informed judgement on sentencing issues reveals a public that is not as punitive as is commonly portrayed. However, rather than claiming that the findings support the intrinsic worth of wholly suspended sentences, it is suggested that they indicate a desire to avoid immediate prison sentences in many cases. In other words it shows there is considerable support for non-custodial options in the kinds of cases that attract wholly suspended sentences, even in the case of some crimes of violence.

    August 28, 2013   doi: 10.1177/0004865813497731   open full text
  • Age, prostitution and punishment in the late-nineteenth century.
    Wimshurst, K.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. August 20, 2013

    Considerable research has been undertaken by historians to understand the meanings of prostitution as it evolved in the nineteenth century. Initially, commercial sex was considered in terms of criminality and deviance. Later studies, influenced by the seminal work of Walkowitz (1980), explored the role of local economies in shaping the lived experiences of prostitutes. This article investigates the incarceration of women labelled as prostitutes in late nineteenth century Queensland, using prison and police sources. The analysis identifies similarities and differences between prostitutes and other female prisoners as a way of exploring the place of prostitutes in patterns of ‘offending’ in their communities. While situated in a criminal justice framework, the article takes account of recent work on historical images and representations of prostitutes. There is general agreement among historians on some core interpretations, but debate still surrounds the role of age, and particularly how concerns about age might have informed strategies of governance. In fact, it seems that age was less important in terms of control strategies. Instead, the reputation of women as street rowdies, petty criminals, and the carriers of disease were deciding factors in official regulation of their lives. However, considerations of age did inform contemporary visions of ‘deviant’ women, and especially popular views about divisions between deviant women themselves. Examples are provided of the formation of views about older and younger female offenders. Such views about generational divisions between ‘fallen’ women have exerted a tenacious hold on modern imaginations.

    August 20, 2013   doi: 10.1177/0004865813497208   open full text
  • Prosecutors' perceptions of the utility of 'relationship' evidence in sexual abuse trials.
    Darwinkel, E., Powell, M., Tidmarsh, P.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. August 20, 2013

    For successful prosecution of sex offences, defined elements that comprise each charge (such as the acts that occurred and offenders’ identities) need to be established beyond reasonable doubt. This study explored the potential benefit (from a prosecution perspective) of eliciting another type of evidence; evidence regarding the relationship between the victim and perpetrator that may explain the victim’s responses. Fourteen prosecutors representing every major Australian jurisdiction participated in individual interviews or a focus group where they were asked to reflect on the perceived relevance of relationship evidence in sex offence trials, and the potential impact of this evidence on court process and outcomes. All prosecutors gave strong support for the premise of including relationship evidence in victim and witness statements, as well as in suspect interviews; however, this type of evidence was not routinely being included in interviews or admitted in trials. The majority of the discussion centred on: (a) the benefits and prevalence of eliciting relationship evidence; (b) how relationship evidence is best elicited in police interviews; and (c) challenges in presenting relationship evidence at trial. Each of these areas, their practical implications and directions for future research are briefly discussed.

    August 20, 2013   doi: 10.1177/0004865813497733   open full text
  • Adolescent Delinquency and Diversity in Behavior Settings.
    Bernasco, W., Bruinsma, G. J., Pauwels, L. J., Weerman, F. M.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. July 22, 2013

    Purpose: This study aimed to test whether adolescents’ delinquency is related to the geographic, functional and social diversity of the behavior settings that they are exposed to. Methods: Data were collected in a two-wave panel study amongst 616 adolescents. In the first wave, diversity was measured using a space-time budget interview recording their activities from hour to hour during four days. Self-control, morality, peer deviance, unsupervised peer activity, and parental supervision were measured using a self-report questionnaire. Delinquency was measured using self-report questions in the second wave. Results: The findings demonstrated that setting diversity is positively related to delinquency. For geographic and functional setting diversity, a substantial part of the positive association is independent of gender, age and the other explanatory variables. Conclusions: Adolescents’ delinquency is not only affected by the overall contents of the settings that they encounter, but also by how much the content of settings varies over the course of the day.

    July 22, 2013   doi: 10.1177/0004865813490949   open full text
  • Assessing gender and ethnic differences in developmental trajectories of offending.
    Ferrante, A. M.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. July 18, 2013

    Research on diversity in offending patterns is crucial given ongoing polemical debates concerning the relationship between gender, ethnicity and crime. Competing theoretical perspectives, limited supporting evidence and inconclusive or contradictory findings from prior research point to the need for more empirically-grounded, generalizable research which compares and contrasts offending patterns across and within gender and ethnic groups. The current study applies a semi-parametric group-based modelling approach to a large, longitudinal dataset of offenders to determine if, and how, offending trajectories vary across gender and ethnic sub-groups. Findings suggest that some trajectory attributes (e.g. number and shape) are shared across gender/ethnic groups, while other trajectory attributes (height, peak age) are not. An exploratory investigation of the risk factors associated with trajectory group membership finds that few of the available factors discriminate between trajectories either within or across gender/ethnic offender groups. The findings fill a knowledge gap, particularly in relation to offending patterns in Australia. Invariance in trajectory risk factors present a challenge to taxonomic theories of offending.

    July 18, 2013   doi: 10.1177/0004865813490948   open full text
  • The Aetiological Crisis in South African Criminology.
    Dixon, B.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. July 01, 2013

    Violent crime in South Africa has remained persistently high since the end of apartheid in 1994. Almost 16,000 murders at a rate of 31.9 per 100,000 of the population in 2010/11 attest to this. Violent crime remains a concern for government and has led one independent observer to describe South Africa as ‘a country at war with itself’ (Altbeker, 2007). This article argues that South African criminology has struggled to come to terms with the often brutal reality of the post-apartheid condition. Drawing on a notion first used by Young (1986) in relation to 1960s Britain, it suggests that stubbornly high rates of violent crime have given rise to an aetiological crisis in South African criminology. An analysis of the origins and nature of this crisis evident in recent writings on violent crime in South Africa is offered against the background of international debates about what criminology is for. A solution to the crisis is sought in work that connects history and biography (Mills, 1959) to reveal the causes, meanings and uses of violence, and point the way to a more relevant post-colonial South African criminology.

    July 01, 2013   doi: 10.1177/0004865813489697   open full text
  • Terrorism and government: between history and criminology: Sir John Barry Memorial Lecture, University of Melbourne, 2012.
    Finnane, M.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. June 28, 2013

    Incontestably the decade since 9/11 has been the age of terrorism. Or has it? In this lecture we consider terrorism as an object of government and of academic research. In arguing that law and criminology have been the pre-eminent disciplines attending to governmental responses to terrorism we note that their interventions have been significant in both their critical stance and in their impact in shaping discourse about the tactics and limits of counter-terrorism, particularly legislation and its uses. But what understanding of the broader role of government in responding to terrorism emerges from such a literature? And what histories are available to inform such an understanding? Existing historical accounts of Australian security and intelligence as a response to political violence and terrorism are for the most part dominated by Cold War politics and ideology, especially through their preoccupation with the politics of intelligence organisations. Increasing availability of security archives, together with a more international view of the context of Australian counter-terrorism histories, provide a sounder base for assessing the emergence of terrorism as an object of government attention since the 1970s.

    June 28, 2013   doi: 10.1177/0004865813483296   open full text
  • Change and stability in ethnic diversity across urban communities: explicating the influence of social cohesion on perceptions of disorder.
    Zahnow, R., Wickes, R., Haynes, M., Mazerolle, L.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. June 28, 2013

    A growing body of research shows that perceived community disorder is not solely driven by crime, but is influenced by the community’s social cohesion and ethnic composition. Drawing on two waves of survey data from 2509 and 2651 individuals in Wave 1 and Wave 2 respectively, living in 71 communities in Brisbane Australia, we examine changes in ethnic composition over two time periods and how these changes influence perceived neighbourhood disorder. We also test whether or not social cohesion mediates these associations. Our findings indicate that high proportions of Indigenous residents and high levels of reported crime averaged across time are associated with greater perceived disorder. Whereas increases in household income over time are associated with lower perceived disorder. We also find that social cohesion is strongly associated with perceived disorder over time, but does not mediate the relationship between the racial and ethnic composition of the community and disorder. Yet when a community’s social cohesion is considered, the effect of increasing household income becomes non-significant.

    June 28, 2013   doi: 10.1177/0004865813486903   open full text
  • Public trust in the police in Taiwan: a test of instrumental and expressive models.
    Sun, I. Y., Jou, S., Hou, C. C., Chang, Y.-c.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. June 28, 2013

    Although public assessments of the police have become the focal concern of a substantial amount of research efforts since the 1970s, a very small number of studies have analysed public opinions on the Taiwan police. Using survey data collected from three cities and two counties in 2010, this study expands the existing literature by assessing whether Taiwan residents’ perceptions are distinguishable in terms of procedural-based trust and outcome-based trust and whether both the instrumental and expressive models are predictive of Taiwanese trust in the police. Findings revealed that the Taiwanese tended to conflate procedural-based and outcome-based trust. Both the instrumental model (concerns about safety) and the expressive model (trust in neighbours and perceived quality of life) were significantly linked to Taiwanese trust in the police. Satisfaction with government performance and media influence were also predictive of police trustworthiness. Directions for future research and policy are discussed.

    June 28, 2013   doi: 10.1177/0004865813489306   open full text
  • Indigenous deaths associated with police contact in Australia: Event stages and lessons for prevention.
    Porter, L.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. June 03, 2013

    This paper analyses factors involved in Indigenous deaths associated with police contact in Australia since the Royal Commission of Inquiry, with a view to identifying possible points of prevention. Coronial reports were collected of 98 cases of Indigenous deaths, occurring in police custody or during custody-related operations between 1992 and 2008. Cases were content analysed for individual and situational variables, as well as Coroner recommendations. These variables are reported around a framework of the stages of the incident from the initial information or contact through to an officer decision to detain and subsequent aftercare. Subsets are detailed by cause of death. Key issues that affect these stages include the role of alcohol, criminal behaviour and mental health. Suggestions for prevention focus upon alternatives to the decision to detain in police custody, particularly for minor offences, and improvements in aftercare, particularly regarding police custody procedures.

    June 03, 2013   doi: 10.1177/0004865813483294   open full text
  • Regional variation in sentencing: The incarceration of aggravated drink drivers in the New Zealand District Courts.
    Goodall, W., Durrant, R.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. June 03, 2013

    Consistency of sentencing outcomes is a key aspect of the achievement of justice. There is uncertainty and disagreement about whether consistency of sentencing outcomes is achieved between locations in New Zealand. This study uses administrative data to examine the degree to which similar offenders convicted of aggravated drink driving receive similar sentences for similar offending in the different circuits of the New Zealand District Courts. Logistic regression is used to control for offence seriousness, criminal history and offender demographics in order to isolate as far as possible the influence of location on sentencing decisions. Results show that while offence seriousness and criminal history combined have the greatest influence on sentencing, location is also influential, with substantial differences between circuits in the use of incarceration.

    June 03, 2013   doi: 10.1177/0004865813483295   open full text
  • Policing terrorism with procedural justice: the role of police legitimacy and law legitimacy.
    Cherney, A., Murphy, K.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. June 03, 2013

    Research shows that procedural justice influences public cooperation with the police. However, it cannot be assumed that factors that influence cooperation in general crime control also apply to people’s willingness to cooperate in counter-terrorism. This proposition is tested among a sample of Arabic-speaking people in Australia. We explore whether procedural justice has an impact on reported willingness to cooperate in counterterrorism policing, and if this is mediated by law legitimacy and identity related factors. Our results show that perceptions about the legitimacy of the law and identification with Australian society matter a great deal when it comes to predicting cooperation in counter-terrorism. In contrast, perceptions of police legitimacy matter most for predicting cooperation in general crime control activities. Our discussion and results are linked to debates about how best to police terrorism.

    June 03, 2013   doi: 10.1177/0004865813485072   open full text
  • Pre-recording testimony in New Zealand: Lawyers' and victim advisors' experiences in nine cases.
    Davies, E., Hanna, K.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. June 03, 2013

    This paper reports on lawyers’ and victim advisors’ experiences with nine pre-recorded hearings involving young people as witnesses in criminal court cases in Auckland. Focus groups, interviews and a questionnaire were used to elicit perceived advantages and disadvantages, issues in the preparation for hearings, conducting the hearings and showing the pre-recordings at trial. Although the sample is not large enough to generate definitive conclusions, 21 of 24 participants described pre-recorded hearings positively with only two prosecutors and one defence counsel expressing concern about increasing the use of pre-recording in the future. Participants raised a series of practice issues which could readily be addressed. Presuming provision to recall the child if necessary, late or incomplete disclosure from third parties is the only significant challenge to these pre-recorded hearings. The logistical challenge of accessing timely relevant information from child protection records was overcome in Auckland through the development of an inter-agency protocol. Pre-recording children’s and young people’s entire evidence appeared to be a constructive contribution to the criminal justice system.

    June 03, 2013   doi: 10.1177/0004865813485590   open full text
  • Youth Sex Offending, Recidivism and Restorative Justice: Comparing Court and Conference Cases.
    Daly, K., Bouhours, B., Broadhurst, R., Loh, N.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. May 23, 2013

    Our aim was to determine the overall rates of general and sexual re-offending of youth (i.e. aged under 18 at the time of offence) charged with sexual offences, ranging from indecent exposure to rape, over 6.5 years in South Australia and whose cases were finalised in court, by conference and by formal caution (N = 365). Controlling for previous offending, we examined if re-offending varied by site of finalisation or by referral to Mary Street, a specialist treatment program. Follow-up times ranged from six to 84 months. We applied a parametric form of survival analysis by fitting the Weibull ‘mixture model’ to the Kaplan-Meier cumulative distribution of failure times (time to re-offend). Covariates, such as prior offending or referral to Mary Street, were introduced to test for differences in survival rates, immune proportions or both between groups. By the cut-off date, 54% of youth had been charged with new non-sexual offences but only 9% with new sexual offences. Court youth had a higher rate of re-offending than conference youth, but these differences were largely explained by prior offending. For the subgroup with no previous offending, however, a significantly slower rate of re-offending was observed for conference youth and for those who were referred to Mary Street. We were able to control for the main effect of prior offending, but complex interactions between co-variates such as offence types, early admissions to offending and legal and therapeutic responses could not be disentangled in our small sample, and we could not explore factors linked specifically to sexual re-offending. Future research should examine the enmeshment of key factors that set youth on differing legal pathways; this phenomenon affects studies comparing conference and court outcomes, whether in naturalistic settings or in randomised field experiments.

    May 23, 2013   doi: 10.1177/0004865812470383   open full text
  • Reconsidering predictors of punitiveness in Australia: A test of four theories.
    Kornhauser, R.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. May 23, 2013

    This study assesses and compares, in an Australian context, four explanations which have emerged to explain punitive attitudes. Each purports these attitudes have different origins: concerns over crime and a lack of trust in the state to deal with it (‘crime-distrust’ model); a desire to reinforce social cohesion or express discontent with society (‘social discontent’ model); an outlet for dissatisfaction over one’s own life (‘personal discontent’ model); and a wish to suppress or express prejudice towards disliked racial minorities (‘racial animus’ model). The study finds support for each of the crime-distrust, social discontent and racial animus models (but not the personal discontent model). Despite rarely being considered in Australia, it also suggest that social discontent and racial animus may have as great, if not greater, an impact on punitiveness as concerns over crime and the state’s response to it.

    May 23, 2013   doi: 10.1177/0004865812470381   open full text
  • Sentencing and Public Opinion: An Empirical Study of Punitiveness and Lenience and Its Implications for Penal Moderation.
    Lovegrove, A.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. April 19, 2013

    This study explores the character of the public’s attitudes to the punishment of individual offenders. Unnever and Cullen’s theory of empathy and, to a lesser extent, Garland’s concept of the offender as ‘other’ provided the guiding framework. Four serious cases, involving six offenders, were presented by the actual sentencing judges to over 470 participants in 32 groups around Victoria, Australia. The participants individually imposed sentences on these offenders; as well they gave reasons for their sentences and discussed the judges’ sentences. The findings are consistent with Unnever and Cullen’s theory, but only partially consistent with Garland’s concept. Thus, for each offender, the sentences ranged from lenient to harsh in the circumstances, but tended to lenience, although there were some swingeing sentences. Moreover, the reasons for and against mitigation were, respectively, empathetic and non-empathetic in character, but in some of the justifications of harshness the offender appeared to be treated as ‘other’. These two theories and the data are viewed as relevant to understanding the factors favouring and hindering penal moderation, and in this way to providing a means of addressing the public’s apparent punitive sentiments relating to sentencing. To this end, Loader’s ideas about penal moderation were found to be helpful.

    April 19, 2013   doi: 10.1177/0004865812470119   open full text
  • Whither Australia's Children's Courts? Findings of the National Assessment of Australia's Children's Courts.
    Borowski, A.
    Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology. April 19, 2013

    The Children’s Court is a critical social institution that decides important legal and social issues relating to children and families. This article reports the findings of a large national study which canvassed the views of judicial officers and other key stakeholders in each of Australia’s eight States and Territories concerning the court’s contemporary status and challenges and future reform directions with a view to informing current policy debates and deliberations. It draws together the major themes that emerged from the analysis of data derived from eight parallel sub-studies conducted concurrently which together comprised the national study. The findings point to a range of changes and underscore the importance of adequately resourcing the courts and the youth justice and child protection systems.

    April 19, 2013   doi: 10.1177/0004865812470382   open full text