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Outside the Cell Defined Terms Baker's Dozen Problems Articles & Reports - Bibliography Report on Government Services 2020 - PART C Justice - released on 29 January 2020Main aims of services within the sectorThe justice sector services aim to contribute to a safe and secure community and promote a law abiding way of life. Services included in the sector
Detailed information on the equity, effectiveness and efficiency of service provision and the achievement of outcomes for the Police, Courts and Corrective service areas is contained in the service-specific sections. Note: Data tables are referenced by table xA.1, xA.2, etc, with x referring to the section or overview. For example, table CA.1 refers to data table 1 for this sector overview. Government expenditure in the sectorFlows in the sectorFor criminal matters which come to the attention of authorities, the typical flow of events is - a) investigation by police and, if charges are laid, b) adjudication by courts with subsequent sentencing if applicable; and c) possible entry into corrective services (adult prison, youth justice or community corrections orders). The roles of police, courts and corrective services, and the sequencing of their involvement, are shown in figure C.1. Figure C.1 Flows through the criminal justice system a, b, c a Does not account for all variations across Australian, State and Territory governments’ criminal justice systems. b The flow diagram is indicative and does not include all complexities of the criminal justice system. c Ex officio indictment refers to a decision by the Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP) to commence criminal proceedings in a higher court without a committal hearing, or where a committal hearing did not result in a case being committed to trial in a higher court. Figure C.2 is an indicative model of the flows through the civil justice system. While the emphasis is on the flow of disputes which proceed to court, the role of alternative dispute resolution processes is considerable in civil justice in part as it is more available as an early alternative to court adjudication. Figure C.2 Flows through the civil justice system a, b a Does not account for all variations across Australian, State and Territory governments’ civil justice systems. b The flow diagram is indicative and does not include all complexities of the civil justice system. Sector-wide indicatorsOne sector-wide proxy indicator of governments' aim to - A) contribute to a safe and secure community; and B) promote a law abiding way of life is reported. Re-offending ratesRe-offending rates show the extent to which people who have had contact with the criminal justice system are re-arrested or return to corrective services (either prison or community corrections). Low or decreasing rates of re-offending may indicate a safer and more secure community environment and the promotion of a more law abiding way of life – however higher rates may also indicate more effective policing and detection of offences. Re-offending rates is a proxy indicator as it only reflects those people whose re‑offending has come to the attention of authorities (some offences may go undetected by, or unreported to, police). The restricted time frames for measuring re-offending (one year for police proceedings and two years for return to corrective services) will also underestimate the proportions of offenders who have repeat contact with the criminal justice system beyond those time frames. Re-offending is measured by:
People proceeded against by policeIn each State and Territory (except Victoria and Western Australia for whom data were not available), of people aged 10 years or over proceeded against by police in 2017-18, between 64 and 82 per cent were proceeded against only once during the year (table CA.3). The data represent each separate occasion that police initiated a legal action against a person. Depending on the type of offence committed, police will either initiate a court action (laying of charges to be answered in court) or non-court action (which does not require a court appearance, for example warnings and penalty notices). Adult offenders released from prisonIn 2018‑19, 46.4 per cent of prisoners released in 2016-17 had returned to prison with a new sentence within two years (some of those returning to prison may also have received community corrections orders). In total, 54.9 per cent of released prisoners returned to corrective services (either prison or community corrections). Nationally, these rates have increased over the last five years (figure C.3). Adult offenders discharged from community corrections ordersIn 2018-19, 15.0 per cent of adults discharged during 2016‑17 after serving orders administered by community corrections returned to community corrections within two years, and 23.9 per cent returned to corrective services (prison or community corrections) (table CA.5). Download data tablesThese data tables relate to the sector as a whole. Data specific to individual service areas are in the data tables under the relevant service area.
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