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Friday, 21 September 2007 00:13 |
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By Teresa Cunningham, Australian Institute of Criminology.
A
juvenile pre-court diversion scheme was introduced in the Northern
Territory in 2000. Administered by police, it uses warnings and
conferences to divert selected juveniles from the court process. This
paper reports on an analysis of Northern Territory police records on
3,597 apprehended juveniles over a 5 year period.
Findings showed that the great majority of juveniles (76%) did not
reoffend within the first year after their initial diversion or court
appearance. However, there were significant differences between
juveniles who attended court and those who were diverted, both in terms
of
risk of reoffending and time to reoffending. Those who were diverted
reoffended less than those
who attended court and those who went to court reoffended more quickly.
Property offenders
who attended court were 30 percent more at risk of reoffending than
violent offenders. Further
work is required to see if the different effects for court versus
diversion remain if prior offending history is taken into account. The
significant differences in offending related to age, gender, Indigenous
status and location confirm the need for specific responses to
particular groups
of juveniles.
Read the full text of
Pre-court diversion in the Northern Territory: impact on juvenile reoffending
(PDF file)
Source: Australian Policy Online, 30-08-2007
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