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- This chapter considers the importance of developing positive
social norms and behaviours amongst Indigenous juveniles and young
adults, their families and the communities in which they live. The
chapter considers programs that promote positive social engagement,
and how individuals and families can be supported to change their
behaviours and provide positive leadership and role models for a
community.
- The chapter considers some of the issues which contribute to
establishing social norms around a child, including:
- intergenerational dysfunction
- community development of social norms and a connection to
culture
- family and community cohesion
- parenting skills
- mentors and role models
- sport and recreation, and
- safe accommodation.
What are social norms?
- Social norms are established by the (positive or negative)
values, beliefs, attitudes and behaviours that dominate across a
community group. For example, social norms may mean going to
school, getting a job, playing sport, respecting elders and others
in family and community, and maintaining a safe home
environment.
- Positive and negative patterns of behaviours are adopted or
copied. A group of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Legal
Services (ATSILs) commented on how social norms might develop:
It is life experience from early childhood that builds an
understanding of what is acceptable behaviour, and what is not.
Normative values are essentially learnt from direct, repeated
exposure to a child’s immediate social environment. They are
influenced by the values and the behaviour of parents, peers,
immediate community and the wider society. They are shaped by
people who are respected and admired and by those who exercise
authority.[1]
- Social norms differ from community to community and family to
family. Some are dysfunctional while some are positive. Acting
Chief Magistrate of the Darwin Magistrates Court, Sue Oliver
commented on different social norms in different communities:
They [young people] do have a social norm. Unfortunately, the
social norm is often a household where there is alcohol and
substance abuse and where there has not been an engagement with
education for a couple of generations. In some communities, it is a
social norm where it is acceptable to take up weapons whenever you
get upset with anyone and you run around the community threatening
people.[2]
Intergenerational dysfunction
- Intergenerational offending is one of the risk factors for
offending identified in the National Aboriginal and Torres Strait
Islander Social Survey.[3] A significant detracting factor in young
people’s environment is the intergenerational entrenchment of
involvement with the criminal justice system among many Indigenous
people and communities.
- A survey conducted of juvenile justice detainees in New South
Wales revealed that ‘41 percent had a parent who had been in
prison at some time during the formative years of that young person
in custody. Eleven percent of them had a parent in custody at the
same time’.[4]
- As ‘many Indigenous fathers have been or are
incarcerated’, and ‘the trend for Indigenous women
incarcerated is also on fast track’[5], their children are
normalising a life spent in contact with the criminal justice
system. Peter Collins from the Aboriginal Legal Service of
Western Australia (ALSWA) described the situation in Western
Australia thus:
...the Aboriginal experience in Western Australia is of
imprisonment. There are so many Aboriginal men who start off by
serving time in juvenile detention centres who progress to adult
jails as young men and then effectively spend a life sentence, by
instalments, in and out of jail. They start off with young cousins
in custody with them and then go on to being uncles who have young
nephews coming through, fathers and bthers.[6]
- A representative of New South Wales Corrective Services
Women’s Advisory Council told the Committee that:
So many of the people in custody or on community based orders
are following the footsteps of their parents or grandparents. When
I was going to Mulawa prison, it was brought home to me when a
woman came up and introduced her mother and her grandmother. They
had all been in custody and they are all in Mulawa together, in the
women’s jail. It was not remarkable to them. It was just what
happens. ... The daughter had a baby, the next one.[7]
- It is concerning that young offenders ‘are often parents
as well, and their reintegration is of great significance to the
development of their children’.[8]
- The impact of incarceration on an offender’s family, up
or down the generational tree, cannot be underestimated. The
consequences can be long term, including ‘missed
opportunities to develop skills, further education and difficulty
in attaining appropriate employment well after the period of
imprisonment’.[9]
The consequences can be far-reaching, as they affect the social and
economic position of the family and the development of
children.[10]
- Cheryl Axelby, of the South Australia Youth Justice Aboriginal
Advisory Committee, said:
One thing which is really critical is how we address the
intergenerational impact of issues which have impacted families for
many generations. ... One of the key issues I see is
timeliness—how you are expected to work with these very
marginalised and disadvantaged families for a short period when the
reality is that it is going to take quite some years of
intervention and supporting families to get them to a stage where
it does not impact as much on children.[11]
- John McKenzie from the Aboriginal Legal Service (NSW/ACT) spoke
of representing grandparents of his current clients in the 1980s
and asserted it has been a ‘fundamental mistake’ by
governments and policy makers to work on issues in a segmented way.
Rather, Mr McKenzie maintained that it is essential that treatment
for a child be provided in a holistic way and involve the family
and community in which they live.[12]
- An inquiry in 2010 by the New South Wales Ombudsman into
service provision to the Bourke and Brewarrina communities found
that for many young offenders[13], their anti-social behaviour occurs within
complex and difficult family environments. A key finding of the
inquiry was the need for human services agencies to take an
‘intelligence driven’ approach to the early
identification of vulnerable children and young people who are at
risk, for the purpose of undertaking integrated case management
aimed at supporting them and their families. This should involve
holistically assessing individual needs and directly facilitating
access to a range of services.[14]
- Luke Grant from Corrective Services New South Wales referred to
the entrenched antisocial thinking and the need for cognitive
behavioural therapy:
An important thing that should not be forgotten and that is very
clear in the correctional literature is that people do develop
entrenched antisocial thinking, and therefore working with the way
people think and the effectiveness of cognitive behavioural therapy
should not be overstated. It is one thing to give someone
vocational skill, but if the person still cannot deal with working
with other people and taking instruction and communicating
effectively and solving problems then all those vocational skills
are a waste of time.[15]
- The Committee considers the current intergenerational
entrenchment of offending has devastating social and economic
impacts for all Australians. However, the impact on Indigenous
victims of crime is profound, with a large number becoming
offenders themselves. The following section discusses the impact of
violence in Indigenous families and communities.
Victimisation
- Family dysfunction, including family violence, child abuse and
neglect, was often identified as important contributory factors in
the offending behaviour of many Indigenous juveniles and young
adults. Data on crime and victims demonstrates that Indigenous
women are more likely to be victims of violence and the Committee
has heard that many Indigenous children who offend have a history
of family trauma, violence and neglect.
- The incidence of violence and assault is higher among
Indigenous youth compared to their non-Indigenous counterparts.
Indigenous Australians aged 15-24 years are more likely to be
hospitalised for assault than other Australians. In the four states
which collect mortality data, Indigenous Australians aged 15-24 are
more likely to die from assault than non-Indigenous Australians in
the same age group.[16]
- Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) data from four
jurisdictions[17]
makes it apparent that Indigenous people are overrepresented in the
criminal justice system as victims of violent crime. For example,
they are at least three times more likely to be a victim of
assault, and four times more likely to be a victim of sexual
assault.[18]
- In each of these jurisdictions, Indigenous victims of assault
were significantly more likely to know the offender than were
non-Indigenous victims of assault.[19] In the Northern Territory, for instance, 44
percent of Indigenous victims of assault were assaulted by their
partner, compared with nine percent of non-Indigenous victims of
assault.[20]
- Statistics show Indigenous women and children are more likely
to experience violence than their non-Indigenous counterparts:
- Indigenous women were more than two-and-a-half times as likely
as non-Indigenous women to have been a victim of physical
violence
- in New South Wales, 9.1 percent of sexual assault victims under
the age of 18 years were Indigenous, and
- in New South Wales, 12.6 percent of people under the age of 18
years who were victims of domestic violence were
Indigenous.[21]
- It is important that the issue of victimisation is not viewed
in isolation from the issue of incarceration. It is apparent that
there is a link between physical and sexual abuse and future
incarceration. A survey of Indigenous women in New South Wales
prisons found that there was a strong correlation between a history
of abuse, offending behaviour, and incarceration:
... 70 percent of the women surveyed said that they had been
sexually assaulted as children and most had also suffered other
types of childhood abuse. 78 percent of the women stated that they
had been victims of violence as adults and 44 percent said they had
been sexually assaulted as adults. 98 percent of the women who were
sexually assaulted as children stated that they had a drug problem,
[and] most equated their drug problem to their experiences of past
violence and their inability to get help with it.[22]
- The survey found that there was an equally strong correlation
between alcohol and substance abuse, offending behaviour and
incarceration. This issue is discussed further in chapter 4 of this
report, but the survey found:
... 68 percent of the Aboriginal women surveyed stated that they
were on drugs at the time of their last offence. 14 percent stated
they were under the influence of alcohol and 4 percent said they
were under the influence of both drugs and alcohol at the time of
their last offence. Only 18 percent said that they were neither
drug nor alcohol affected at the time of their offending however
one third of them said they were heroin users.[23]
- Given the higher likelihood of Indigenous people being victims
of violent crime and the links between victimisation, alcohol and
substance abuse, and incarceration, it is important that policy
responses to these issues are holistic in design and do not treat
each issue separately from the others. Addressing violence in
Indigenous families and communities is critical and the Wirringa
Baiya Aboriginal Women’s Legal Centre stressed that programs
that specifically focus on the needs of victims of violence must be
supported and need to be culturally, gender and age
appropriate:
Strategies aimed at changing these norms should not be confined
to the behaviour of offenders. They must also address the
circumstances of the victims. Indigenous women and children need to
be provided with the means to respond to such violence. Victims
must have access to services, for example help with AVO
applications, places of refuge, counselling, and victims
compensation. By focusing attention on the right of Indigenous
women and children to be free of violence and by providing the
services they need, social norms which tolerate and even condone
violence are publicly challenged.[24]
Indigenous Family Safety Agenda
- Community safety is a vital pre-condition to achieve the
Council of Australian Government’s (COAG’s) targets in
health, education and housing. Governments agreed at a November
2009 roundtable on Indigenous community safety that if there is not
action to address serious problems in community safety, it will not
be possible to make improvements in other areas.[25]
- To keep children and families safe, the Commonwealth Government
manages and funds the Indigenous Family Safety Program, is
progressing the National Framework for Protecting Australia’s
Children 2009-20 with state and territory governments, and is
finalising a National Plan to Reduce Violence Against Women and
Children. Commonwealth funding contributes to programs such as
family support services for vulnerable families, increasing the
number of child protection workers, and strengthening alcohol
controls in the Northern Territory.
- The Indigenous Family Safety Program is providing $64.4 million
over four years, from July 2010, to fund innovative Indigenous
family safety community initiatives focused on the Agenda’s
priority action areas:
- addressing alcohol abuse, with an urgent focus on reducing the
supply of alcohol
- more effective police protection to reduce incidents of
violence
- working with strong local leaders to strengthen social norms
against violence by changing attitudes and fostering respectful
relationships, and
- coordinating support services to aid the recovery of people who
experience violence, including children who experience or witness
violence.[26]
- In 2010-11 the Indigenous Family Safety Program provided $12.5
million to family safety initiatives such as safe houses,
counselling, prevention and early intervention programs, early
education and behaviour change programs.[27]
Committee comment
- The Committee is concerned that Indigenous people, especially
Indigenous women, are much more likely than non-Indigenous people
to be the victims of violent crime. Of great concern is the
identification of an intergenerational cycle of abuse and violence.
Indigenous juveniles are more likely to witness or experience a
greater incidence of violence than non-Indigenous juveniles, and so
normalise this behaviour which then increases the risk of them
resorting to violence in the future.
- Tackling intergenerational disadvantage and dysfunction is
critical to improving the outcomes for Indigenous children and
their families, and reversing these trends for future generations.
Government policies and programs must first and foremost address
the widespread violence experienced by Indigenous women and
children. The Committee supports the family safety initiatives
under the Indigenous Family Safety Agenda.
- The Committee acknowledges that this is a recent initiative and
that measures of success should take into account the challenges of
assessing changes to social norms. The Committee notes that the
Indigenous Family Safety Program provides funding over four years
and expresses its concern regarding the limited life of this
funding and the need for sustained programs to effect appropriate
social change over time.
- However, supporting safe communities is more than just placing
a road block across the path that so many young Indigenous men and
women are headed down. It must be about opening up new pathways so
the intergenerational track of family dysfunction, poor health,
poor educational outcomes, and few employment opportunities is not
a predestined one. Prevention must be about opening new directions
and opportunities that engage, inspire and provide hope and
positive choices for young Indigenous people.
- In order to successfully address the overrepresentation of
young Indigenous people in the criminal justice system, the
families and environments in which they are living must be
supported. The following sections discuss the importance of strong
individuals, families and communities to effectively turn around
the entrenched negative social norms and incarceration that is so
devastating for Indigenous youth.
Community development of positive social norms
- The social norms for many young Indigenous people include
negative values and beliefs that do not lead to wellbeing or
positive social engagement. Therefore, many witnesses believed
there was a need to rebuild positive social norms in communities
and to achieve this it is essential to engage local communities and
their leaders in the design of local diversion programs.
- Danial Kelly, Lecturer in Law at Charles Darwin University,
stressed:
... the greatest positive contribution the Government can make
is to resource and facilitate these senior and respected people to
design and implement locally appropriate solutions to lowering
juvenile crime.[28]
- There is much evidence to support the development of social
norms and behavioural programs in partnership with Aboriginal and
Torres Strait Islander people and communities. A local partnership
approach helps to ensure the cultural overlay and sensitivities are
incorporated from the outset during the developmental stages of
program, including the ongoing monitoring and evaluation
components.[29]
- Sam Jeffries, former Co-Chair, National Congress of
Australia’s First Peoples referred to empowering Indigenous
people to develop and support local programs:
When local people are engaged in the design of projects and
programs in their communities, they often work better and achieve
better outcomes. If it is something that comes in from the outside,
it is seen as an imposition. If they are disconnected from the
process in the first place, it does not work as well. [30]
- Shane Phillips, who leads a grassroots diversion program Tribal
Warriors, agreed that making a difference is based on capacity
building, influence and generation change within communities:
What we are saying is that we are actually in the community, and
we are asking for a bottom-up approach here. We are asking for the
strengths of our own communities to be the guiding light.
Let’s take what is there. There are people within the
community who can help build a better future for a lot of our kids.
They can make it influential. That is the key to it, because if it
becomes influential within our communities it is something they
want to be part of and that they will share. It is about the
ownership. The ownership of this whole belief and moving forward is
the key to it. I am an advocate for mentoring, but it is capacity
building within communities and families that is so
important.[31]
- Many submissions referred to the importance of incorporating
cultural awareness and knowledge and how it can be an enriching
component of services for juveniles and young adults when
establishing positive social norms and behaviours. They asserted
that strengthened cultural connections strengthen intergenerational
relationships and community building. Submissions noted that
culture plays a significant role in Indigenous wellbeing and must
be recognised in program and service design and delivery.[32]
- Professor Bamblett, from the Victorian Aboriginal Child Care
Agency Cooperative Ltd, made the point that culture is a critical
issue for young Indigenous people:
A lot of kids that are involved in the criminal justice system
have no connection with their culture. A lot of them have been
placed in non-Aboriginal care, with a history of being in
non-Aboriginal care with no connection to culture. They do not know
who they are. They did not know who their family are. We know that
when children leave care, 80 per cent of them go home. If children
have been raised by non-Aboriginal people, who do they go home to?
That is why the criminal justice system becomes their home, becomes
their family, becomes the only institution that they know.[33]
- The Committee considers it of paramount importance that
Indigenous families and communities have the capacity to lead
change and take responsibility for establishing the positive social
norms that will foster a new generation of Indigenous children with
choices and opportunities for the future. Social change and
expectations must come from within communities, however there is a
role for governments to provide an interim safe and stable
community environment and to assist in developing community
leadership and cohesion where needed.
- Incorporating Indigenous engagement and representation in
intervention and diversion programs is discussed further in chapter
8.
Supporting families and communities
- Supporting families is key to opening positive pathways for
Indigenous youth at risk and halting the intergenerational
entrenchment in the criminal justice system. Leza Radcliffe,
Western Australian Justice Congress, stated that services for the
child and their family as a whole are required:
... without looking at the family and the home life, it is not
going to make any difference. You can prop that kid up until they
are about 13 or 14, but then you will find them going away from the
mainstream, finding a social life, finding a sex life, finding
alcohol and drugs if they have not already found them, and you will
lose them anyway. If you do not repair whatever is going on in the
home, you could have 48 foster families and you will still need
more.[34]
- Patricia Mason, Western Australian State Aboriginal Justice
Congress, stated that for the entire extended family there must be
intense programs and guidance that provide parenting support and
mentoring:
I think that we are failing to mentor these youths and families.
Mothers—well, you can’t inherit a behaviour; it is
learnt. They only do things that they learn from the people who are
around them, and if they are not getting pulled up for that
behaviour they think it is right. ... They have got no guidance.
These youths have got nothing. Even the parents have got nothing,
because that is the way they were brought up. [35]
- The Committee heard further evidence suggesting that capacity
building in communities as a whole provides the best possible
support to youth at risk and their families. Shane Phillips, Tribal
Warrior Association, referred to capacity building in
communities:
We have to build the strengths up. Even if people are not
relatives they are part of the same community and network. The
simple old saying that it takes a village to raise a child is so
important to us. We have to build the capacity.[36]
- Supporting communities from where young offenders come from is
an essential part of the early intervention and rehabilitation
process. John McKenzie, Aboriginal Legal Service (NSW/ACT),
described the importance of supporting the family and community of
a young offender when they are released from custody:
You can do the best rehabilitative effort in the world while you
have them in your care in an institution but if they go back to a
community and a family that is in despair and does not have
resources, in which there is hopelessness and in which there is not
due regard for education, health and fitness then that person is
more than likely going to fail. All the effort that all of the
agencies around this table put in whilst they were in the criminal
justice system will have come to naught because the community they
go back to is actually reproducing the circumstances in which the
person initially got into the offending.[37]
- Transitioning programs and services from detention to
communities was seen as an essential part of reducing recidivism
and this is discussed further in chapter 7.
- Some evidence was received about the importance of maintaining
strong family connection while a parent is in custody. Research
shows family contact and maintaining family relationships during
imprisonment is related to lower levels of recidivism. UnitingCare
Burnside referred to the Newpin Inside Parents program which is
designed specifically for parents who are incarcerated and offers a
combination of therapeutic and education parenting groups. Early
indications of a study of a small sample of male prisoners in
Western Australia are that Newpin Inside Parents ‘was a more
effective catalyst for change in increasing participant’s
parenting competency, wellbeing (particularly lowering depression)
and reducing their criminal attitudes...’.[38]
- The Committee notes that some young girls and boys aged 14 and
above who are in custody are already parents themselves and need to
maintain those family connections. Katherine from the New South
Wales Corrective Services Women’s Advisory Council claimed
there is not enough emphasis on family programs and maintaining
family connections while a parent is in custody:
Despite improvements in corrections in this area, there are
still not enough telephones or visiting hours. Visits are still a
privilege rather than a right. The usual things that have been
raised forever still happen. As a result, the connections and
family relationships that are known to help reduce recidivism occur
in spite of the system rather than because the system prioritises
that.[39]
Parenting skills
- Poor parenting is a significant predictor of juvenile
offending. Higher risks of offending are related to parental
neglect, parental attitudes, parental conflict and family
disruption.[40]
Professor Bamblett discussed the importance of parenting and its
link to children being involved in the criminal justice
system:
I think the strongest predictor to young people and children
being involved in the criminal justice system is parenting, and
there is an absence of this with a lot of our young people,
particularly with a history of stolen generations. I think all the
evidence in Victoria suggests that young people who are involved in
the criminal justice system have issues at home: mental health,
drug and alcohol, disability. I think if we do not do something
about parents working with parents and families in the home we are
not going to stem the flow of children in the system.[41]
- A study of factors affecting crime rates in the Indigenous
communities of Bourke and Lightning Ridge found that support for
parents and especially support for young mothers was an area of
crucial need. The study found that limited parenting skills were
often an intergenerational issue:
It is self-evident that parents love their kids and want to do
what is best for them. One reason given for why some people find
parenting more difficult than others was because they themselves
came from unstable families with many children raised by aunties or
grandparents. A number of people referred to young people
themselves becoming parents, who want the security of family but
“have been brought up without those [parenting]
skills.”[42]
- Mrs Radcliffe from the Western Australian Justice Congress
reminded the Committee that many parents are under the age of 18
and they are raising kids with limited skills.[43] Una Champion from New
South Wales Health asserted that young people need guidance on how
to be parents because they have not learnt the skills from their
own parents, with up to 60 percent of those young people in custody
having a parent who has been in prison. Ms Champion believed that
beginning mentoring support when the mother is in the maternity
hospital would assist. [44]
- Claire Gaskin, Clinical Director, New South Wales Health agreed
that some of the best interventions which have been shown to have a
significant impact on antisocial behaviour, are early interventions
in parenting. However, Ms Gaskin asserted that such early
interventions must be culturally sensitive and funded appropriately
for families to access. Effective programs will involve people who
understand the parents and the culture within which they are
working. Ms Gaskin said there is a need to have Indigenous people
being trained and working with the specialists in those
fields.[45]
- The following sections consider some of the major government
initiatives in place directed at building parenting skills through
the support of families and communities.
Commonwealth Government programs supporting Indigenous families
and communities
- Under the Early Childhood Building Block of Closing the Gap,
the Commonwealth Government is ‘integrating services such as
child care, early learning, and parent and family supports so
vulnerable children receive a better start to life’.[46]
- The Family Support Program, administered by FaHCSIA, is a key
element of the Commonwealth Government’s investment in
supporting families and children. The Commonwealth Government is
working to deliver, in collaboration with other levels of
government and non-government organisations, better coordinated and
more flexible support services for children and families. Community
and Family Partnerships is one of three streams under the Family
Support Program and it was funded almost $84 million in 2009-10.
Community and Family Partnerships aims to improve child
development, safety and family functioning and targets
significantly disadvantaged communities and families, especially
vulnerable and at risk families and children.[47]
- Three of the programs providing support to Indigenous parents,
families and communities under Community and Family Partnerships
are:
- Indigenous Parenting Support Services (IPSS) targets families
with children aged up to twelve years old with a particular focus
on children under the age of two. The concept of parenting and
caring includes extended families and kinship ties. Where possible
and practical IPSS are located in existing Indigenous services and
comprise Indigenous workers. IPSS are integrated into existing
services with established infrastructure, systems and good working
relationships with Indigenous families with young children. These
include child care centres, schools, Aboriginal Health Centres and
other related services to provide Indigenous families with access
to enhanced parenting support.[48] It was expected that 51 Indigenous Parenting
Support Services sites across Australia would be operating by June
2011.[49]
- Communities for Children Plus (CfC Plus) funds organisations to
develop and facilitate a whole of community approach building on
community strengths and the existing infrastructure of
organisations, networks and resources, making use of strong
evidence of what works in early intervention. Within a site, CfC
Plus targets the whole community. Where a need is identified,
specific strategies focus on particular target groups. Each CfC
Plus site is required to establish and maintain a Communities for
Children Committee (CCC). The CCC is a voluntary group of key
stakeholders within a site who work in collaboration with the
Facilitating Partner to develop, guide and implement the
activity.
CfC Plus sites bring together Commonwealth, state and local
governments and the non-government sector to plan and deliver
targeted services according to local needs. There will be a strong
focus on building links with state government child protection
services - as well as services primarily targeted at adults - to
tackle known parental risk factors including mental health, family
violence, housing and substance abuse.
Eight CfC Plus sites were identified by the Commonwealth and
state governments as being communities where targeted and
integrated service delivery, including mental health, drug and
alcohol, family violence and housing services, were required to
help prevent child abuse and neglect. The eight CfC Plus sites are
Launceston (Tasmania), Cardinia (Victoria), Ipswich (Queensland),
Kempsey (New South Wales), Midland (Western Australia), Playford
(South Australia), East Arnhem (Northern Territory) and
Campbelltown (New South Wales). All eight CfC Plus service
providers have been selected and are currently at various phases of
implementation[50],
and
- Indigenous Children Program delivers early intervention and
prevention programs targeted at families with children at risk of
abuse or neglect. The program provides a range of services
including playgroups, parenting programs, counselling, drug and
alcohol education and anger management. The program works on the
strengths of community members to increase their capacity to be
caring parents and positive role models. This program operates in
32 locations in cities and regional centres across
Australia.[51]
- The Commonwealth Government also committed $6 million over
three years from 2010-11 to the Strong Fathers, Strong Families
Program which is administered by the Department of Health and
Ageing. This program aims to promote the role of Aboriginal and
Torres Strait Islander fathers, partners, grandfathers and uncles,
and encourage them to actively participate in their
children’s and families’ lives, particularly in the
antenatal period and early childhood development years.[52]
Queensland Family Responsibilities Commission
- The Queensland Family Responsibilities Commission (FRC) began
operating in four communities (Arukun, Coen, Hopevale and Mossman
Gorge) in July 2008. The purpose of the Families
Responsibilities Commission (FRC) is ‘to support the
restoration of socially responsible standards of behaviour and to
assist community members to resume and maintain primary
responsibility for the wellbeing of their community and the
individuals and families within their community’.[53]
- Four obligations for all Indigenous and non-Indigenous adults
in relation to child wellbeing, school attendance, lawful behaviour
and responsible tenancy are enacted in the FRC legislation as a
message of what is expected. The FRC has the legal power to enforce
the obligations and direct that individuals who breach them have
their welfare income payments managed. Primarily the FRC achieves
these objectives by holding conferences with individuals who have
breached their obligations. In these conferences, the Commissioner
and Local Commissioners sit with the concerned person to talk about
the problem and possible solutions.[54]
- Mr David Glasgow, Commissioner, Families Responsibilities
Commission explained the FRC’s objectives around restoring
reasonable social norms and the wellbeing of children:
Our objects and our priorities are: early intervention and the
wellbeing of children, to raise local authority in each community,
and to help the community re-establish some reasonable social
norms—such as, it is the norm to go to school; it is the norm
not to drink at home; it is the norm not to have pornography at
home, and those kinds of things. Then we assist the community as a
whole—we deal with the whole family of those who come before
us—to make decisions about their future.[55]
- An independent evaluation of the FRC found indications of
positive community-level change around school attendance, alcohol
and violence in the two communities of Aurukun and Mossman Gorge.
The evaluation also found the FRC appeared to be contributing to
restoring Indigenous authority by supporting local and emerging
leaders in Local Commissioner roles to make decisions and model
positive behaviour. It was noted in the evaluation that although
the FRC had been operating for 18 months only, it is strengthening
its role within participating communities.[56] The Families
Responsibilities Commission is discussed further in chapters 5 and
8.
New South Wales Intensive Supervision Program
- The Intensive Supervision Program (ISP), which has been
operating since May 2008 in two locations in New South Wales,
Western Sydney and Newcastle, is based on the multisystemic therapy
model, an intervention model that addresses the known, multiple
causal pathways to juvenile offending behaviour. These causes
include the characteristics of the juvenile, parenting skills,
family relations, peer associations, school and vocational
performance, neighbourhood characteristics and family-community
interactions. A critical aspect of the ISP is working with the
young person's family with an emphasis on promoting behavioural
change in the young person's family, peer and school
environment.
- The ISP targets serious repeat juvenile offenders. It is a
program that concentrates on identifying in the family the
strengths and the processes needed to support the young person in
the community. As part of the program, teams of professionals
(including three to four clinicians, an Aboriginal Team Advisor and
a Clinical Supervisor) go into the homes, schools and communities
of these young people, and they are available to young offenders
and their families 24 hours a day, seven days a week, for up to six
months. These professionals look at the factors associated with
juvenile reoffending, including substance abuse, housing needs,
community disadvantage, family conflict, negative peer pressure and
financial instability. The program develops positive inter-agency
links that help families and juveniles access appropriate
services.[57]
- Eighty-seven New South Wales families have signed up to the
program since May 2008, and 90 percent have completed it
successfully. Preliminary research has shown a 60 percent drop in
offending by young people during the program and 74 percent during
the six months after completing the program. Preliminary data
collected by the Multisystemic Therapy Institute as of December
2009 shows that 87 percent of caregivers had acquired the
appropriate parenting skills necessary to handle future problems;
78 percent had improved family relations; and 70 percent had
improved support networks.[58]
- The New South Wales Government referred to the benefits of ISP
to entire families:
While the primary aim of the ISP is to have an effect on young
people already involved in the criminal justice system by reducing
their risk of further re-offending, international research strongly
indicates that these types of family interventions may have a
preventative effect on younger siblings in a family as parents
learn the skills to parent more effectively.[59]
- While the New South Wales Government is supportive of ISP, the
Committee notes the Western Australian Government did not continue
funding for its Family Intensive Program after four years
(2004-2009) because it ‘has shown it has not been able to
successfully engage with the families of these young people and
ultimately has not achieved the results I would expect from such a
resource intensive program’. The Western Australian
Government redirected its funding to other diversion programs for
at risk youth, such as youth bail services and regional youth
justice services. [60]
Committee comment
- The Committee heard about the pressing need for government and
non-government service providers to deliver integrated services,
particularly where the problems people face are complex and
multifaceted.
- The description of the program Communities for Children Plus
appears to provide what so many communities require. Likewise, the
Families Responsibilities Commission aims to provide a coordinated,
cross jurisdictional support and empowerment to parents, families
and communities to enable Indigenous children to develop in
environments with positive social norms. The Committee supports the
continued funding of these programs and the continued monitoring of
their effectiveness in developing positive social norms for
Indigenous youth and in preventing contact with the criminal
justice system.
Recommendation 3 – Positive social norms
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The Committee recommends the Commonwealth Government
continue to fund holistic, intergovernmental services to Indigenous
youth and their families and communities, such as Communities
for Children Plus, and evaluate their effectiveness in
strengthening positive social norms in communities and preventing
Indigenous youth engagement with the criminal justice
system.
|
- The Committee notes with interest the outcomes of the Intensive
Supervision Program in New South Wales where offending behaviour by
youth on the program has reduced and parenting skills have
increased. The Committee urges the Commonwealth Government to
consult with state and territory governments on the effectiveness
of multisystemic therapy models, such as the Intensive Supervision
Program, in establishing positive social norms in families and
communities and in reducing the offending behaviour of Indigenous
youth.
Mentors and role models
- The importance of role models and mentors was raised by many
participants at public meetings around the country. The Committee
heard that Indigenous mentors and inspirational leaders are helping
to make positive changes within communities, and therefore should
be supported appropriately.[61]
- Discussions in support of Indigenous mentoring referred to its
value in all aspects of life, for example in the arts, sport,
music, culture, school, family, community, police force, and
government representation. Mentors and role models can assist youth
at risk to develop self esteem, self worth, future aspirations and
a commitment to community responsibility. They can contribute to
rehabilitation and mentor on healthy lifestyles, sport, and
education and employment goals.
- Young Indigenous people respond well to the Indigenous mentors
who are from their local community. The Committee received very
supportive evidence about several successful mentoring schemes. The
evidence highlighted the importance of mentoring for children at
risk, within a custodial setting and during their reintegration
back into community post‑release. The Hon. Geoffrey Eames
provided the following example of the success of mentoring:
There is a mentoring program, for example, in Warrnambool in
Victoria, which appears to have very good prospects of success. It
is about trying to grab kids at the very earliest point, when they
are just on the fringes of getting involved with the criminal
justice system, and giving them a buddy or a mentor, who takes a
deliberate and active role in watching that kid’s progress
and trying to keep the kid out of custody. [62]
- Luke Freudenstein from the New South Wales Police was very
supportive of Indigenous mentors, both men and women:
Some of the girls come on board and they are mentors for us.
They are helping to speak to the young girls who are getting
involved in these fights. So, again, you see the importance of the
mentors, ... and I firmly believe that is why we are having so much
success at Redfern. ... They are a godsend for us as police,
because we get them to do some of the things that we cannot do.
They get the message across, and that assists us greatly.[63]
- The New South Wales Bar Association proposed that:
Mentoring of offenders by Elders and suitably qualified people,
in cultural issues, for education and training, drugs and alcohol
abuse, domestic violence etc, should be available before, during
and after custody.[64]
- Sometimes mentors themselves have a history of disadvantage or
offending behaviour and they are helping youth to turn their lives
around. Magistrate Joan Baptie praised the work of mentors, in
particular one of the juvenile justice officers who sits in court
in Campbelltown:
He is quite generous about indicating his past history but he
was in trouble as a kid. He is a marvellous mentor, particularly
for those young Aboriginal boys who go through Campbelltown court.
He knows all the families and he is able to click with them, talk
to them, work them through some of their problems and put them in
contact with people who might be able to advance that.[65]
- The meenah mienne mentoring buddy system in Tasmania has seen
some encouraging results from their mentoring and buddy system with
three young Aboriginal buddies pursuing employment and further
educational opportunities in the first year. The system seeks to
divert young Aboriginal people from juvenile detention and crime by
supporting intergenerational relationships, targeting community
building, role-modelling, healing, literacy and skills development.
There has been large demand from high risk Indigenous youth to join
the buddy system and there is a need to train and support more
mentors.[66]
- Shane Phillips, from the Tribal Warrior Association in Sydney,
described the role of the mentor:
A real mentor enables; they make themselves redundant. ...
People do not want a mentor for the rest of their life. They want
someone to help them engage in what they need to engage in and take
on the responsibility for themselves, and see the milestones behind
them and say, ‘I’ve accomplished that.’[67]
- Some of the evidence received suggested the biggest obstacle
for running mentoring programs was the lack of sufficient on-going
funding despite programs demonstrating successful outcomes. The
Youth Justice Aboriginal Advisory Committee in South Australia
submitted that one of its mentoring programs was receiving reduced
funding which limited the capacity of mentors:
The MAYFS Panyappi mentoring program originally funded through
Commonwealth Attorney Generals Department and received funding of
approximately $400,000 per annum and received a National Crime
Prevention Award. This program became an ongoing initiative under
State Government and the funding of this program was significantly
reduced to $190,000 per annum which has significantly reduced the
capacity of the program to employ Aboriginal Mentors.[68]
- Sam Jeffries, former Co-Chair of the National Congress of
Australia’s First Peoples, supported further government
funding for intensive mentoring programs:
The mentoring that we talk about, I think, needs to be
intensive. That might cost a lot of money. We quite often say,
‘We can’t quite pay for that because it comes too
high.’ When we talk about mentoring, it might get down to one
mentor to two kids or something like that, and that costs a lot of
money when you think about that. But we are quite comfortable and
relaxed about accepting the cost to society when they are
institutionalised.[69]
Committee comment
- Indigenous mentors to support Indigenous young people at risk
of entering the youth justice system is a key initiative to provide
resilience and guidance to develop the social norms and behaviours
that lead to positive social engagement. Mentors support Indigenous
young people in managing the social stresses associated with the
criminal justice system and life back in the community.
- The Committee recognises that many Indigenous communities are
unable to provide the necessary leadership, mentoring and role
modelling for youth at risk. The Committee considers it essential
that a Commonwealth coordinated mentoring scheme is made available.
The Committee notes that any costs associated with the
establishment and administration of such a scheme is likely far
less than the continued cost of incarceration of Indigenous
youth.
- The Committee is convinced that mentoring can be very effective
at changing the lives of Indigenous youth who are at risk of
entering the criminal justice system. Mentors are best sourced at
the local community level and further assistance is required to
support effective mentoring programs in a more coordinated and
sustained manner. The Committee considers that any mentoring scheme
should aim to assist those mentoring programs already in place,
such as meenah mienne, and facilitate a nationwide network of
mentoring programs.
Recommendation 4 - Mentors
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The Committee recommends the Commonwealth Government
support a national program to develop and provide local mentors for
Indigenous youth at risk before, during and after
custody.
|
The role of sport
- Positive role modelling and social norms of behaviour can be
encouraged through sport and recreation. The Committee heard about
the benefits of sport providing Indigenous people with a grass
roots level of positive contact with the community. The engagement
of Indigenous youth in sport and recreation can promote positive
social and health wellbeing and can help to minimise the potential
for offending behaviour for Indigenous youth. The Australian Sports
Commission (ASC) submitted:
Sport and recreation are shown to have a positive impact on
Indigenous Australians, improving overall health, reducing
violence, crime, theft and vandalism, reducing substance abuse and
self-harm and improving school attendance. Indigenous sport
historian Colin Tatz found that sport contributes to enhanced
social cohesion, improved self esteem, reducing suicide risks and
improved social support for Aboriginal communities.[70]
- There are a number of Commonwealth funded initiatives to
promote the engagement of Indigenous youth in sport. For example,
the Youth in Communities program supports a range of sport,
recreation and educational services for young people in remote
communities where options for young people are otherwise very
limited. Funding has contributed to the upgrading of sport and
recreation infrastructure, equipment and coaching. These programs
are intended in part to:
- provide an effective diversion for young Indigenous people from
at risk behaviours
- improve life choices and outcomes for young Indigenous people,
through engaging them in positive activities that promote pathways
to better health and wellbeing, community capacity building and
participation in school, work and social networks, and
- strengthen and improve the youth services infrastructure, both
in the number of youth workers employed and the facilities
available for providing youth services and activities.[71]
- FaHCSIA is managing the following Northern Territory based
Australian Football League (AFL)/FaHCSIA sports partnership
programs:
- AFL Club Fostership Program - Five participating AFL clubs have
established links under this program with selected Indigenous
communities, primarily in the Northern Territory, to deliver
football-related activities, promote health active lifestyles and
encourage increased school attendance
- AFL Ambassadors for Life Mentoring Program - More than 100
Indigenous youth from around Australia are being mentored under
this program by 36 listed Indigenous AFL players who have undergone
mentoring training. This program aims to build capacity and
leadership skills, targeting young Indigenous males (13-14 years of
age) at risk of substance abuse and other harmful behaviours
- Wadeye Development Officer -FaHCSIA is providing $130,000 a
year under this partnership agreement over three years, to support
Australian Rules activities in Wadeye, NT. This program is managed
by NT State Office, with the funding to conclude at 30 June 2010.
The funds are being used to appoint a development officer and
support local AFL competitions in Wadeye. Advice to date is that
the program has had a positive impact on anti-social behaviour in
the community, and
- Groote Eylandt Regional Manager - $70,000 was also earmarked
under the partnership agreement in 2008-09 to support the
employment of an AFL Regional Manager on Groote Eylandt. This
Manager is responsible for establishing junior and local AFL
competitions on Groote, as well as providing support for the
Fostership program (Groote Eylandt is one of the target communities
under this program).[72]
- Another successful initiative funded by FaHCSIA in partnership
with the Queensland Government is the Kids Living Safer Lives
project. This program aims to prevent and reduce domestic and
family violence in Cape York's Indigenous communities through a
range of activities that engage children and young people.
Beginning in July 2008, the project coordinates police programs
such as Be Strong Be Heard, Violence No Way with the AFL's
Kickstart lifestyle program, and other self-esteem building
activities. The project has been shown to reduce violence and the
fear of violence in the Indigenous communities of Aurukun, Coen,
Hope Vale, Kowanyama, Lockhart River, Mossman Gorge and
Pormpuraaw.[73]
- The ASC has managed and administered the Indigenous Sport
Program, in financial partnership with other Commonwealth, state
and territory agencies and the mainstream sporting industry since
1993. The Indigenous Sports Program was developed to encourage
Indigenous people to be more active and to play sport at all
levels. The program works to increase opportunities for Indigenous
people to learn the skills needed to organise, deliver and manage
community-based sport, and to ensure that talented Indigenous
sportspeople are able to access the support they need to reach
their sporting goals. The Indigenous Sports Program has a network
of Indigenous Sport Development Officers who look at the sporting
needs of Indigenous communities and then develop programs, often in
partnership with other sporting organisations, to deliver
community-based sporting opportunities and services.[74]
- The ASC stated that the Commonwealth, state and territory
governments collectively committed nearly $45 million in 2009-10 to
sport and recreation activities and programs for Indigenous
Australians. However, the ASC asserted that the combination of
funding is spread too thinly across government agencies, therefore
a ‘duplication of activities, limited strategic direction and
vision, and limited understanding of the Australian sports industry
has resulted in an inefficient, fragmented and under-resourced
approach to sport and recreation service delivery for Indigenous
Australians’.[75]
- The ASC was working to develop a coordinated approach to
national funding for Indigenous sporting programs, overcome issues
in the area of short term resourcing and differences in delivery,
and build sustainability in communities. They explained that:
At its December 2009 meeting, the Sport and Recreation Ministers
Council (SRMC) agreed to establish a working party of Australian
Government and state and territory departments of sport and
recreation as well as cross portfolio representatives to:
- assess the need for a national coordination and partnership
model to reduce confusion, overlap and delivery
inefficiencies
- map and qualify existing sport and recreation funding for
Indigenous Australians across government jurisdictions and
non-government sectors; examine the appropriateness and efficacy of
existing sport and recreation service delivery models to Indigenous
Australians
- examine place and evidence based approaches to sport and
recreation participation and community sport capacity building,
with a view to longer term sustainability
- identify best practice models for engaging non-government
funding sources to augment government support, and
- recommend options for evaluation and improving future service
delivery.[76]
- The inter-government working party was due to report to the
Sport and Recreation Ministers Council by June 2010; however, the
Committee understands that this work has stalled.
- The lack of structured leisure and recreational pursuits is a
well recognised criminogenic risk factor. An Honours thesis by Ross
Tanimu reported that:
A project by the Australian Sports and Health Commission
utilised sports to gauge outcomes in Aboriginal communities in the
Northern Territory. Results saw considerable benefits for
Aboriginal youth in education, physical and emotional wellbeing as
well as minimising their contact with the judicial system.[77]
- The research thesis found that:
... sports participation, with the support of other programs and
agencies, has the ability to be used as an effective diversion and
prevention program to minimise the risk for offending behaviour and
possible onset of recidivism for Aboriginal youth.[78]
- Another important aspect of sports participation is the need to
conform to regulations. Understanding the rules of various sports
and the penalties associated with infringements in sports can
assist the understanding of the penalties imposed by crime and
offending behaviour.[79]
- A report by Monsignor David Cappo, Commissioner for Social
Inclusion in South Australia, commented on the importance of sport
and recreation based activities for Indigenous people. The report
stated:
Throughout the consultations, Aboriginal young people indicated
a strong connection to sport and recreation based activities. Many
said that there was a lack of opportunity to participate in sport
either due to the absence of sporting facilities within their
communities, or through a lack of funds required to access such
programs.[80]
- Safe and productive activities for young people after school
and in the evening are effective at preventing Indigenous youth
from participating in anti-social behaviour. However there is often
a lack of activities for Indigenous youth at risk. A study of
factors affecting crime in two towns in New South Wales found that
the Indigenous young people believed there were few activities for
them after school – there was little sport, no dance classes
and no BMX track or skate park. The high cost of participating in
sport was also noted by several people. [81]
- The Australian Children’s Commissioners and Guardians
submission referred to the issue of boredom in communities:
Another very significant issue for Indigenous children and young
people in regional and remote areas is the lack of 'things to do'.
This is constantly raised in consultations by ACCG members with
children and young people across the country. Children and young
people state that boredom and an absence of structured (and
affordable) sport and recreation activities have a negative
influence on their mental health and increase the risk of them
coming into contact with the justice system. Core service agencies,
such as the police, local government and community organisations,
consistently reinforce this message. It is important, then, to look
outside the youth justice system, to other agencies such as sport
and recreation, for assistance in crime prevention.[82]
- Mark Horton from the Dubbo Youth Foundation stated that sport
had proven to be the most effective and fastest means of engaging
large numbers of Indigenous youth with the wider community and he
believed resources do not need to be significant. The Dubbo Youth
Foundation addresses a range of impediments to Indigenous youth
participation in sport, including:
- A-Administrative support to youth and parents to complete sport
registration paperwork (to overcome literacy and numeracy issues)
including obtaining birth certificates (see attached
documentation).
- B- Administration of the ICC DoHAs indigenous small grants
program, that provides small (up to $200) part funding grants for
sport, arts and cultural equipment, registration fees to allow for
club membership registration.
- C- Transport subsidisation for those with access issues.
- D- Introduction to mainstream sport, by creating links with and
for clubs to disadvantaged youth.
- E- Club governance advice and support, club committee and
volunteer training facilitation and membership advice
support.
- F- Contracting external NGO community providers to conduct
school holiday diversionary and education programs.[83]
- Police citizen youth clubs have provided Indigenous youth with
recreational opportunities and have helped to build police
relations. A good news story was told about Mornington Island in
Queensland where robberies had dramatically reduced. The Queensland
Police Commissioner referred to the dedication and long term
commitment of the local Sergeant and his wife in developing the
police-citizens youth club and other programs working with
Indigenous youth, including programs for young women. [84]
- Similarly in New South Wales, police are using sporting
programs for Indigenous women to help to prevent offending
behaviour. In Redfern New South Wales the police sponsor the
girls’ basketball team and the rugby league team. They have
jerseys which recognise the Aboriginal community and police
together in sport.[85]
- Midnight Basketball Australia is a harm prevention charity that
helps to coordinate basketball tournaments across communities
throughout Australia. The program is a catalyst for community
building and successfully brings together youth services, schools,
police, councils, local businesses, voluntary organisations,
volunteers and parents. The tournaments run for an eight-week
period on Friday or Saturday evenings and participants must attend
the life-skills workshops that are held before any games are
played. A healthy meal is provided on the night and at the end of
the evening a bus takes the players safely home to their front
door.
- Midnight Basketball has been very successful and continues to
expand throughout Australia. By the end of 2010, eighty tournaments
had been held throughout Australia. The feedback from the youth
involved as well as the local police has been positive. The
participants have an activity on a Friday or Saturday night that is
fun, safe and healthy. The local police report that there is less
crime committed on the nights that Midnight Basketball is held and
the local police involved in the tournaments are able to build up a
rapport with some of the youth who might otherwise engage in
anti-social behaviour.
- Each Midnight Basketball tournament is evaluated formally by an
external independent research body through a variety of mechanisms.
These include a detailed demographic survey of participants and
tournament attendees; a survey of participant attitudes to the
workshops and overall experience; and a survey for the participant
service organisations involved.[86]
Committee comment
- Sport teaches many social norms such as the benefits of
commitment to a team and the consequences of not meeting
commitments, healthy living, participation and supporting peers. It
provides positive encouragement, role modelling, a sense of
achievement and belonging to a community. Community based sport and
recreational activities offer a positive alternative to drug and
alcohol use and anti-social behaviour. There are positive results
emerging from the partnership sports programs administered by
FaHCSIA and the work of the Australian Sports Commission in
engaging Indigenous youth in sport.
- The Committee commends the work of Police and Community Youth
Clubs around the country, especially the work of dedicated police
officers who are making a positive contribution to the lives of
Indigenous youth at risk. The committee visited the Police and
Community Youth Club at Dubbo, New South Wales, and observed
firsthand the importance of the centre's work and the parenting and
mentoring that was being provided to Indigenous youth.
- The Committee notes the impressive commitment made by sporting
bodies, such as AFL, in particular around Australia to provide
leadership and mentoring to young people and to actively engage
Indigenous youth in sport. The Committee urges other sporting
bodies to demonstrate their social responsibility and actively work
in communities to make sport a positive influence in the lives of
Indigenous youth. The Committee notes the inspirational work being
done by a number of Indigenous sports people, such as
Cathy Freeman and others, to engage youth through sport and so
open new pathways for youth at risk.
- Similarly Midnight Basketball, which is run by volunteers,
plays a crucial role in teaching social norms, providing a sense of
belonging, and engaging youth in productive and enjoyable
activities.
- The Committee sees many opportunities for other sporting and
community groups to undertake valuable work in this area and urges
others to become involved for the rewards it brings to the
volunteers and participants. However there is a role for the
Commonwealth and for state and territory governments to utilise
sport as a means of teaching positive social norms, building self
esteem, and establishing a sense of belong to a community with the
responsibilities and support that this brings.
- The Committee is disturbed to hear that progress has stalled on
plans for a coordinated approach to national funding for Indigenous
sporting programs. The Committee urges the Minister for Sport,
Senator the Hon. Mark Arbib, to take this task of national
coordination and best practice service delivery of sport and
recreation to Indigenous Australians to the next meeting of the
Sports and Recreation Ministers Council and address barriers to the
inter-government working party finalising its report.
- The Committee recognises that there are often practical
impediments which impede the participation of Indigenous youth in
sport, such as identification issues which are considered the
following section. Other issues include uniform and registration
fees, transport, guardian permissions, and health and hearing
issues. The Committee recommends that the Commonwealth, in
coordination with state and territory governments, investigate ways
to overcome these practical impediments in order to maximise the
accessibility and benefits of sporting programs.
Recommendation 5 – Sport and recreation
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The Committee recommends the Commonwealth
Government:
- work with state and territory governments to support
more sporting, music and other recreational activities for
Indigenous children and youth outside of school hours, particularly
in remote and regional areas
- encourage sporting bodies and sporting celebrities to
become more involved in organising sporting engagement for
Indigenous children and youth
- ensure continued funding for sports partnership
programs and the provision of infrastructure and services to ensure
sports participation by Indigenous youth, and
- investigate and address impediments to sports
participation for Indigenous young men and women.
|
Identification issues
- The Committee heard that often one of the major impediments to
participation by Indigenous youth in organised activities, such as
sport, was lack of a formal form of personal identification, such
as a birth certificate or a driver licence.
- The Committee notes that a significant percentage of Indigenous
people do not have a birth certificate and this has implications
for participation in community activities, as well as employment
opportunities, getting a drivers licence, passport, opening a bank
account or applying for a loan.
- In Dubbo in 2006, the Aboriginal Birth Certificate Pilot
Project was developed after the New South Wales Sport and
Recreation team recognised that the lack of definitive
identification among Indigenous people was a significant barrier to
participation in mainstream community activities. Young Indigenous
people could not become involved in sport and recreation, and be
covered by insurance, without a birth certificate. The project was
a collaborative effort by New South Wales Attorney-General’s
Department and the Office of Births Deaths and Marriage, Dubbo City
Council, New South Wales Sport and Recreation, the Aboriginal Land
Council, the Aboriginal Health Service and Community Working
Parties, and other local groups. Over a 12 month period, 750 birth
registrations were administered in Dubbo. Approximately 500
Indigenous people who previously did not participate in mainstream
community sport were able to join sporting activities.
- This pilot project in Dubbo has now been completed, however its
success indicates the need for such programs in other areas.
Several witnesses and submissions have commented on the requirement
to assist young people to establish forms of identification, such
as birth certificates and Medicare cards.[87] The Victorian former
Minister for Community Services acknowledged difficulties in
obtaining birth certificates is a barrier for young people to exit
criminal lifestyles and may impede their access to services and
support.[88]
- When the Committee visited the Brisbane Youth Detention Centre,
the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Transition Officer
indicated that a significant part of her role was assisting
Indigenous youth with identification paperwork.
- The Committee notes that, in addition to increasing the
capacity of Indigenous people to participate in community
activities, proof of identity can bring a range of benefits to the
individual and the community, including expanded provision of
services by agencies through recognition of resident population
numbers.
- The Committee considers that currently birth registration and
birth certificates are often not valued by Indigenous communities
due to their sense of alienation from the wider Australian
community. The Committee considers that a more innovative approach
is required to encourage birth registrations and to make birth
certificates recognised as a valued document that acknowledges a
sense of belonging to the Australian community. While beyond the
direct terms of reference of this inquiry, the Committee sees
Indigenous wellbeing and pride could be enhanced by the option of
birth registration processes and birth certificate documents which
have a greater relevance to the Indigenous community. As an
example, Australian passports have been changed recently to provide
colourful images of the diversity of Australian life on each
page.
- The Committee urges the Commonwealth Government to investigate
how states and territories may give the birth certificate value
within Indigenous communities and how the birth registration
process may be made more culturally appropriate and accessible.
Additionally there is a need to ensure that Indigenous youth who do
not have birth certificates are assisted to obtain these in order
to participate in the range of community and economic opportunities
this provides.
Recommendation 6 – Identification documents
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The Committee recommends the Commonwealth
Government:
- investigate options to make the birth registration
process more culturally appropriate and accessible in Indigenous
communities
- investigate how to raise awareness of the utility and
value of the birth certificate document in Indigenous
communities
- address reasons for the low rate of birth registrations
in Indigenous communities and ensure that Indigenous health
services and youth workers are actively working to ensure that
births are registered and that all Indigenous children have a birth
certificate, and
- liaise with state and territory governments to
coordinate assistance to all youth to ensure they have access to
their birth certificate and that this is not an impediment to them
fully participating in community, travel, education, or employment
opportunities.
|
Safe accommodation
- A stable, safe and supportive living environment is critical in
establishing positive social norms for Indigenous children and
youth, and in enabling them to develop a positive sense of
wellbeing and aspirations for the future. Regrettably, in many
cases home is not a safe and socially stable environment for
Indigenous youth. The issue of the lack of appropriate and safe
accommodation for youth at risk was raised by many participants in
the inquiry. Shane Phillips, of the Tribal Warrior Association,
referred to children who are trying to break their pattern of
offending but struggling to keep moving forward unless they have
appropriate accommodation:
Some of the kids that we have come from some fairly difficult
backgrounds. They are trying to do something for themselves. Our
whole program is based on taking control of your own destiny. You
cannot change where you have come from or where you are at right
now but you can change where you are going. When the kids go home
that evening, maybe home is not that suitable and they might not
get the rest that they need to get up and do what they need to do
to change it. So we need accommodation not just for that but also
for kids and older people who are coming out of the system.
Accommodation is always a problem.[89]
- Limited safe accommodation options for Indigenous youth
heighten the risk of young people offending and re-offending. The
Committee received much evidence that supports investing in safe
accommodation options for Indigenous youth at risk of contact with
the criminal justice system. A range of accommodation options, such
as out-of-home care, safe houses, and youth hostels, is required to
help divert young Indigenous people away from contact with the
criminal justice system.
- Joan Baptie, Magistrate of the Children’s Court in New
South Wales described the issue of accommodation for youth as a
recurrent and trans-generational problem which is not being
resolved.[90] When
youth appear before court, options for diversionary intervention
may not be possible as there is not adequate safe accommodation, so
the youth may end up in detention or custodial arrangements
instead.
- The Australian Human Rights Commission pointed the Committee to
evidence demonstrating that Indigenous children were more likely
than non-Indigenous children to be the subject of child abuse and
neglect:
The rate of substantiated notifications for child abuse and
neglect for Indigenous children has been increasing between 1999 to
2008. Indigenous children are six times more likely to have a
notification for child abuse or neglect which is found to be
substantiated and seven times more likely to be subject to a Care
and Protection Order than non-Indigenous children.[91]
- A University of Technology of Sydney study into factors
affecting crime rates in Indigenous communities in New South Wales
said an emerging theme was:
... the need to understand the circumstances of young offenders,
many of whom experience neglect, or live in unsafe circumstances,
moving from house to house, or who might not know where there next
meal was coming from.[92]
- Serene Fernando, Indigenous researcher and PhD candidate with
the Australian National University, put forward the following
premise:
... the majority of Indigenous high risk youth are living
independently in their communities (urban, rural and remote) and
raising themselves. It is also considered that there are many
Indigenous young people that are neglected, homeless and living in
environments that are unsuitable and detrimental to their health
and well being which exposes them to developing anti-social
behaviours. [93]
- Ms Fernando further suggested that youth hostels should be
available to provide accommodation and support for young Indigenous
people to live independently in their local communities.
- A study of Indigenous youth and crime in the towns of Bourke
and Lightning Ridge referred to the continuing need for short term
and long term accommodation options for Indigenous youth:
Crisis accommodation for young people in Bourke is very limited.
Children under the age of 12 may accompany their mother to the
Safehouse but there is no facility for unaccompanied children or
young people who need safe short-term accommodation. Separately,
long-term hostel style accommodation was also identified as
beneficial for young people who may need to leave home, which
perhaps could be associated with the school. As described in the
report, a specific bail address is not always realistic for some
young people and a suitably supervised bail house is
needed.[94]
Out-of-home care
- Out-of-home care services provide care for children and young
people aged 0–17 years who are placed away from their parents
or family home for reasons of safety or family crisis. State and
territory governments fund child protection, out-of-home care,
family support and other relevant services. The services may be
delivered by the government or the non‑government
sector.
- Out-of-home care places are intended to improve the outcome for
the child only when it is not possible to maintain the child within
their family. Placement with the wider family or community is
sought where possible, particularly in the case of Indigenous
children. Nationally, at 30 June 2008, 9070 Indigenous children and
22 096 non-Indigenous children were in out‑of‑home
care. The rate of children placed in out-of-home care per 1000
children was 41.3 for Indigenous children and 4.6 for
non-Indigenous children.[95] These figures indicate the disproportionately
high number of Indigenous children in out-of-home care and the
consequent increased need for the provision of a greater number of
culturally appropriate and supportive accommodation options.
- Nationally, at 30 June 2008, 53.3 percent of Indigenous
children in out-of-home care were placed with a relative/kin, 20.6
percent placed with other Indigenous carer or Indigenous
residential care, and 26.0 percent were not placed with
relative/kin or with other Indigenous carer or other Indigenous
residential care.[96]
- The Committee received evidence linking young people who have
lived in out-of-home care to future offending behaviour and
detention. Up to a third of young people who have grown up in
out-of-home care are in the juvenile justice system.[97] Many Indigenous youth
who enter out-of-home care have had their emotional and
intellectual development already impaired by trauma, abuse and
neglect. There are concerns that group-style residential care can
bring a large group of troubled young people together, creating an
environment where peer pressure might exacerbate youth offending.
It has been found that a number of young people end up in the
juvenile justice system because the out-of-home care system cannot
cope with their behaviours. [98]
- Katherine from the New South Wales Corrective Services
Women’s Advisory Council believes ‘that it is not so
much involvement in juvenile delinquency which is a predictor of
subsequent adult involvement but that it starts earlier than that
with the out-of-home care system’. Ms McFarlane expressed
concern that many non-government agencies are taking on out-of-home
care services, without necessarily being well equipped and trained
to handle the complexities and cultural sensitivities of youth at
risk. Tensions between government agencies, such as departments of
community services and juvenile justice, over which is responsible
for children who have committed offences, was also a
concern.[99]
- Dr Kerry Chant, Chief Health Officer, New South Wales Health,
referred to the care system not improving outcomes for
children:
We have to have an out-of-home care system that improves
outcomes. It is the same with the criminal justice system: the
outcome for children who come out of care is generally that they
progress to the adult criminal system. ... So you have to look at
the out-of-home care system. You have to look at why so many of our
young people who are vulnerable and at risk are not able to access
treatment or services.[100]
- Many submissions called for a holistic approach to out-of-home
care where different agencies work together to provide services to
Indigenous youth at risk and their families. Victoria Legal Aid
stated that they represent young people who have been charged with
offences such as criminal damage and offensive language whilst they
have been in residential care. Victoria Legal Aid suggested that
these behaviours may reflect symptoms of a child's distress and
dislocation, fear and anxiety, and possibly underlying mental
health issues. Therefore, Victoria Legal Aid suggested the
introduction of alternative behaviour management responses that
include therapeutic responses to control or respond to children and
young people who exhibit self destructive or anti social
behaviours.[101]
- There are many highly regarded diversionary accommodation
programs for young Indigenous people across the country operated by
Indigenous organisations. One example is the Tirkandi Inaburra
Cultural and Development Centre, which is a property located near
Griffith in New South Wales that houses up to 16 boys aged 12-15 on
a voluntary basis for between three and six months.
- Tirkandi Inaburra aims to teach young people how to make better
decisions, develop strategies to deal with their problems and to
develop and draw on their own resilience in order to take
responsibility for their decisions, and minimise the risk of
becoming involved in the criminal justice system. Tirkandi Inaburra
relies on a partnership between the Aboriginal community and
government with the main recurrent funder being the New South Wales
Attorney-General’s Department.[102] The New South Wales
Government submitted that reports from Tirkandi Inaburra indicate
that the program has a significant impact on the lives of
participants, with the vast majority re-engaging in education,
training or employment upon graduation from the program.[103]
- The Committee recognises that stable, positive accommodation,
whether it be provided in kinship care, foster care or other
appropriate forms of out-of-home care can be difficult to achieve.
Indigenous operated diversion and accommodation programs are
proving to be successful. It is the Committee’s view that
carers in these positions must be adequately supported and
resourced.
- The objective of all Australian governments to protect the
safety and welfare of Indigenous children while maintaining the
cultural ties and identity of Indigenous children in out-of-home
care is defined in the ‘Placement in Accordance with the
Aboriginal Child Placement Principle’. There are National
Standards for out-of-home care as part of a whole of government
initiative to apply uniform measures to formal care arrangements
including residential care, foster care and kinship care. The
National Standards for out of home care have been designed to
deliver consistency and drive improvements in the quality of care
provided to children and young people. The 13 National Standards
focus on the key factors that directly influence better outcomes
for those living in out-of-home care. The measurement of and
reporting on outcomes is a major feature of the refining and
improving of the National Standards over the long term.
- The Committee notes Standard number 3 sets out that Aboriginal
and Torres Strait Islander communities participate in decisions
concerning the care and placement of their children and young
people.
- Measures will be developed over time to allow for a complete,
transparent and comparable public report which will be developed
within four years of commencement of the National Standards in July
2011. The views of children and young people in out-of-home care
about the difference the National Standards are making to their
lives will be captured. The Commonwealth Government will fund an
annual, national survey of children and young people in care for
this purpose, building off the existing surveys in a number of
jurisdictions.[104]
Commonwealth Government support for accommodation for
Indigenous youth at risk
- The National Affordable Housing Agreement (NAHA) is an
agreement by COAG and aims to ensure that all Australians have
access to affordable, safe and sustainable housing that contributes
to social and economic participation. Commencing in January 2009,
the NAHA provides over the first five years $6.2 billion in housing
assistance to low and middle-income Australians. Data indicates
that in 2008-09, 30 percent of all Specialist Homelessness Services
agencies provided services for youth and the Indigenous
population.[105]
- The NAHA is supported by three National Partnership Agreements
which have been developed to increase construction of social
housing and reducing homelessness for all Australians, including
Indigenous people living in regional and urban areas. The three
agreements are:
- The National Partnership Agreement on Homelessness
- The National Partnership Agreement on Remote Indigenous
Housing, and
- The National Partnership Agreement on Social Housing.
- Through the National Partnership Agreement on Homelessness, the
Commonwealth, state and territory governments are providing
$1.1 billion over five years from July 2009. The Agreement
focuses on three key strategies to reduce homelessness:
- prevention and early intervention to stop people becoming
homeless
- breaking the cycle of homelessness, and
- improving and expanding the service response to homelessness.
[106]
- Under the Homelessness Agreement, the Commonwealth Government
has agreed to provide additional funding to the states and
territories to reduce homelessness. States and territories have
agreed to match the Commonwealth Government funding to deliver
services and capital projects that will reduce homelessness. The
Agreement recognises that a reduction in homelessness requires
targeting key groups, including people escaping violence,
especially women and children, children exiting care and
protection, Indigenous people, and people exiting social housing,
health and mental health institutions, and juvenile or adult
prisons. Some of the specific initiatives to assist Indigenous
youth to access and sustain safe accommodation are:
- In New South Wales (NSW), the Aboriginal Advocacy and Tenancy
Support Service is helping Indigenous people currently using
specialist homelessness services in NSW to transition into long
term accommodation, and new individual case workers are helping
people leaving care, or custody, transition into accommodation.
These new services are in addition to the provision of up to eight
new houses being provided to Indigenous women leaving detention in
Metropolitan Sydney and Northern NSW.
- In Victoria, new housing support workers including one
Indigenous specific housing support worker are being provided at
major prisons to provide pre and post release support to assist
those exiting prison to access accommodation. New early
intervention and response arrangements are also being implemented
to support Indigenous Women and Children though culturally
appropriate means in the Gippsland and Loddon Mallee regions.
- In South Australia, accommodation through a Common Ground
facility in Port Augusta will provide intensive support and
opportunities to connect with the community for up to 40 Indigenous
families per year. Accommodation and access to essential health and
other welfare services are also being provided for 194 transient
Indigenous people through the Aboriginal Transitional Accommodation
program. In addition, an indigenous employment and workforce
development strategy is being implemented to improve opportunities
for Indigenous people to find and retain employment.
- In Western Australia, assertive outreach programs are linking
40 Indigenous rough sleepers with long-term housing and health
services in remote areas, providing support based on individual
needs.
- In the Northern Territory, Youth Development Crisis
Accommodation is being established to provide up to eight crisis
beds with 24 hour support, such as education, training, alcohol and
other drugs services, living skills and counselling. The
Youth Development Crisis Accommodation will also provide two houses
to assist young people attend school or training, remain engaged
with family and receive support to build life skills. This is in
addition to an Intervention and Case Management Service that will
incorporate a ‘Return to Country’ program principally
aimed at Indigenous people sleeping rough in town areas. The
program will assist people to return to their community, provide
intervention, referral, identification services, and accommodation
for homelessness and itinerant people across the Territory.
- In the Australian Capital Territory, the Building Housing
Partnerships program will help break the cycle of homelessness by
coordinating and delivering support, assistance and living-skills
programs for vulnerable tenants.[107]
- Under the second agreement, the National Partnership Agreement
on Remote Indigenous Housing, the Commonwealth Government is
providing $5.5 billion over 10 years to provide up to 4200 new
houses in remote Indigenous communities, upgrades to around 4800
existing houses, as well as housing checks, maintenance,
improvements to town camps, and accommodation for people travelling
to get work. An example is in far west New South Wales where
transitional accommodation is being provided for women and families
exiting safe house accommodation. The safe houses are primarily
managed by Indigenous community organisations.[108]
- The third agreement, the National Partnership Agreement on
Social Housing, facilitates the Social Housing Growth Fund, in
which the Commonwealth Government provided $200 million in 2008-09
and $200 million in 2009-10 and contributed to achieving outcomes
such as:
- people being able to rent housing that meets their needs
- people who are homeless or at risk of homelessness achieving
sustainable housing and social inclusion, and
- Indigenous people having improved housing amenity and reduced
overcrowding. [109]
- In the Northern Territory, the Commonwealth Government, in
partnership with the Northern Territory Government, is also
investing in:
- the Strategic Indigenous Housing and Infrastructure Program to
deliver 750 new houses, 230 rebuilds of existing houses and 2500
refurbishments across 73 remote Indigenous communities and a number
of community living areas (town camps) in the Northern Territory by
2013,[110]
and
- the Alice Springs Transformation Plan to fund enhanced social
support services, a Communities for Children site, housing and
upgraded infrastructure in the town camps, and short-term
accommodation to reduce homelessness.[111]
Committee comment
- Safe accommodation for Indigenous youth at risk is essential in
preventing them from coming into contact with the criminal justice
system.
- The Committee notes there are a number of successful local
initiatives in communities already, where accommodation and other
support for Indigenous youth are provided. The Committee wishes to
make special mention of those that take on kinship and foster care
arrangements and acknowledge the commitment of these individuals
and community members assisting to change the lives of Indigenous
children and youth. The Committee is aware that across many
Indigenous communities, grandparents and aunties have stepped in to
take on the raising of children when parents are unable to do so.
The Committee acknowledges the enormous commitment of these carers
and their contribution in improving the lives of Indigenous
children.
- The Committee supports the Commonwealth initiatives in place,
in particular those to reduce homelessness and increase the
provision of remote Indigenous housing. These are important
measures to provide stable and better quality housing within
communities. However, safe accommodation options for youth remains
a concern and appears woefully under-resourced.
- In making recommendations to the Commonwealth Government to
invest in an expanded number and range of accommodation options for
Indigenous children and youth at risk, the Committee makes the
following observations:
- where out-of-home care of any sort is provided it necessarily
assumes a responsibility for the social nurturing and development
of positive social norms for the child. When the State places a
child in care arrangements, it assumes a responsibility for a
child's social development. Accordingly accommodation alternatives
should coordinate with local diversion programs, mentoring
opportunities and sporting and community engagement options in
order to provide a holistic service that responds to a child's
social needs and future development
- the range of out of home care services must be culturally
appropriate and accessible to Indigenous youth, recognising the
particular needs for kin and cultural connections
- professional staff, volunteers and care providers should be
given access to appropriate cultural training relevant to working
with Indigenous children, and
- where children are not able to safely live with their family, a
coordinated counselling approach is required to assist the family
or household as a whole to make changes with the aim of being able
to return the child to a stable and safe environment - ie while
accommodation may be required for the child, assistance is required
for the household in order to maximise the future opportunities for
all.
Recommendation 7 - Accommodation
|
-
|
The Committee recommends that the Commonwealth
Government commit to ensuring that there exists within all states
and territories an expanded number and range of safe and
gender-appropriate accommodation options for Indigenous children
and youth. These options should include access to coordinated and
holistic intensive care services. A housing or accommodation plan
needs to have been identified for every youth leaving
detention.
The Committee suggests that the range of appropriate
accommodation options should include extended family houses,
identified safe houses, hostel and school accommodation, foster and
respite care, and emergency refuge accommodation.
|
[1] Aboriginal Legal
Service (NSW/ACT), North Australian Aboriginal Justice Agency and
Queensland Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Legal Service,
submission 66, p. 5.
[2] Sue Oliver,
Darwin Magistrates Court, Committee Hansard, Sydney, 28 January
2011, p. 18.
[3] New South Wales
Government, submission 84, p. 1.
[4] Michael Levy,
Australian National University, Committee Hansard, Canberra, 4
February 2010, p. 3.
[5] Libby Carney,
submission 92, p. 1.
[6] Peter Collins,
ALSWA, Committee Hansard, Perth, 30 March 2010, p. 46.
[7] Katherine, New
South Wales Corrective Services Women’s Advisory Council,
Committee Hansard, Canberra, 24 June 2010, pp. 6-7.
[8] National Justice
Chief Executive Officers Group, Staying Strong on the Outside:
Indigenous Young Adults, September 2009, p. 4.
[9] ACTCOSS,
submission 34, p. 7.
[10] UnitingCare
Burnside, submission 4a, pp. 3-4.
[11] Cheryl
Axelby, Youth Justice Aboriginal Advisory Committee, Committee
Hansard, Adelaide, 20 May 2010, p. 6.
[12] John
McKenzie, Aboriginal Legal Service (NSW/ACT), Committee Hansard,
Sydney, 28 January 2011, p. 32.
[13] Aboriginal
children make up over 80 percent of juvenile detainees in Western
New South Wales. New South Wales Ombudsman, Inquiry into the
Service Provision to the Bourke and Brewarrina communities,
December 2010, p. III.
[14] New South
Wales Ombudsman, Inquiry into the Service Provision to the Bourke
and Brewarrina communities, December 2010, pp. VIII-IX.
[15] Luke Grant,
Corrective Services New South Wales, Committee Hansard, Sydney, 28
January 2011, p. 22.
[16] Department of
Health and Ageing, submission 73, p. 3.
[17] Queensland,
Northern Territory, South Australia, New South Wales.
[18] ABS, Recorded
Crime – Victims, Cat. No. 4510.0, June 2010, pp. 61, 64, 67
& 70.
[19] ABS, Recorded
Crime – Victims, Cat. No. 4510.0, June 2010, pp. 62-71.
[20] ABS, Recorded
Crime – Victims, Cat. No. 4510.0, June 2010, p. 71.
[21] Wirringa
Baiya Aboriginal Women’s Legal Centre, submission 64, pp.
3-4.
[22] Aboriginal
Justice Advisory Council, Speak Out, Speak Strong Aboriginal Women
in Custody Research Project, 2003, p. 5.
[23] Aboriginal
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in Custody Research Project, 2003, p. 5.
[24] Wirringa
Baiya Aboriginal Women’s Legal Centre, submission 64, p.
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[25] Communiqu ,
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2009.
[26] FaHCSIA,
Indigenous Family Safety Agenda,
<www.fahcsia.gov.au/sa/indigenous/pubs/families/Pages/indig_fam_safety_agenda.aspx>
accessed 13 April 2011.
[27] Closing the
Gap: Prime Minister’s Report 2011, p. 41.
[28] Danial Kelly,
submission 107, p. 1.
[29] Government of
South Australia, submission 82, p. 3.
[30] Sam Jeffries,
National Congress of Australia’s First Peoples, Committee
Hansard, Sydney, 28 January 2011, p. 20.
[31] Shane
Phillips, Tribal Warrior Association, Committee Hansard, Sydney, 28
January 2011, p. 22.
[32] Western
Australian Department of Indigenous Affairs, submission 83, p. 2;
Aboriginal Legal Service (NSW/ACT), North Australian Aboriginal
Justice Agency and Queensland Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander
Legal Service, submission 66, p. 13; Tasmanian Government,
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[33] Muriel
Bamblett, Victorian Aboriginal Child Care Agency Cooperative Ltd,
Committee Hansard, Sydney, 28 January 2011, p. 49.
[34] Leza
Radcliffe, Western Australian Justice Congress, Committee Hansard,
Sydney, 28 January 2011, p. 50.
[35] Patricia
Mason, Co-Chair, Western Australian State Aboriginal Justice
Congress, Committee Hansard, Sydney, 28 January 2011, pp. 51-2.
[36] Shane
Phillips, Tribal Warrior Association, Committee Hansard, Sydney, 28
January 2011, p. 14.
[37] John
McKenzie, Aboriginal Legal Service (NSW/ACT), Committee Hansard,
Sydney, 28 January 2011, p. 33.
[38] UnitingCare
Burnside, submission 4a, pp. 4-6.
[39] Katherine
McFarlane, New South Wales Corrective Services Women’s
Advisory Council, Committee Hansard, Sydney, 28 January 2011, p.
36.
[40] Dr Troy
Allard, Understanding and preventing Indigenous offending,
Indigenous Justice Clearinghouse, Brief 9, December 2010, p. 5.
[41] Muriel
Bamblett, Victorian Aboriginal Child Care Agency Cooperative Ltd,
Committee Hansard, Sydney, 28 January 2011, p. 49.
[42] Alison Vivian
and Eloise Schnierer, Jumbunna Indigenous House of Learning,
University of Technology Sydney, Factors affecting crime rates in
Indigenous communities in NSW: a pilot study in Bourke and
Lightning Ridge, November 2010, pp. 21 & 57.
[43] Leza
Radcliffe, Western Australian Justice Congress, Committee Hansard,
Sydney, 28 January 2011, p. 48.
[44] Una Champion,
Director, Adolescent Health, Justice Health, New South Wales
Health, Committee Hansard, Sydney, 28 January 2011, p. 54.
[45] Claire
Gaskin, New South Wales Health, Committee Hansard, Sydney, 28
January 2011, p. 64.
[46] Closing the
Gap: Prime Minister’s Report, p. 23.
[47] FaHCSIA,
Family Support Program,
<www.fahcsia.gov.au/sa/families/progserv/Pages/cfp_guidelines.aspx>
accessed 6 April 2011.
[48] FaHCSIA,
Family Support Program,
<www.fahcsia.gov.au/sa/families/progserv/Pages/cfp_guidelines.aspx>
accessed 6 April 2011.
[49] Closing the
Gap Prime Minister’s Report 2011, p. 24.
[50] FaHCSIA,
submission 79a, pp. 10-11
[51] Closing the
Gap Prime Minister’s Report 2011, p. 24.
[52] Closing the
Gap Prime Minister’s Report 2011, p. 24; Department of Health
and Ageing,
<http://www.health.gov.au/internet/main/publishing.nsf/Content/oatish-health-QandA_factsheet>
accessed 13 April 2011.
[53] Families
Responsibilities Commission, ‘About the Commission’,
<www.frcq.org.au> accessed 17 March 2011.
[54] FaHCSIA,
submission 79, p. 12.
[55] David
Glasgow, Commissioner, FRC, Committee Hansard, Sydney, 28 January
2011, p. 68.
[56] Department of
Families, Housing, Community Services and Indigenous Affairs,
Implementation Review of the Family Responsibilities Commission
– Final Report, September 2010, pp. 6-8.
[57] New South
Wales Department of Juvenile Justice, Intensive Supervision
Program, Pamphlet, April 2008.
[58] Mr Graham
West, NSW Legislative Assembly Hansard, 19 May 2010, p. 23077.
[59] New South
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[60] Christian
Porter, Western Australian Treasurer and Attorney-General, State
government to target at-risk youth, Ministerial Media Statement, 9
September 2010.
[61] Ken
Zulumovski, Public Interest Advocacy Centre, Committee Hansard,
Sydney, 4 March 2010, p. 54; Shane Phillips, Tribal Warrior
Association, Committee Hansard, Sydney, 28 January 2011, p. 12,
Youth Justice Advisory Committee, submission 97, p. 6.
[62] The Hon.
Geoffrey Eames, Committee Hansard, Melbourne, 3 March 2010, p.
6.
[63] Luke
Freudenstein, New South Wales Police, Committee Hansard, Sydney, 28
January 2011, p. 35.
[64] New South
Wales Bar Association, Criminal Justice Reform Submission, December
2010, p. 6.
<http://www.nswbar.asn.au/circulars/2010/nov/cjrs.pdf>
accessed 22 March 2011.
[65] Joan Baptie,
Magistrate, Children’s Court of New South Wales, Committee
Hansard, Sydney, 28 January 2011, p. 10.
[66] meenah
mienne, submission 16, p. 1.
[67] Shane
Phillips, Tribal Warriors Association, Committee Hansard, Sydney,
28 January 2011, p. 12.
[68] Youth Justice
Aboriginal Advisory Committee, South Australia, submission 97, p.
4.
[69] Sam Jeffries,
National Congress of Australia’s First Peoples, Committee
Hansard, Sydney, 28 January 2011, pp. 17-18.
[70] ASC,
submission 42, p. 3.
[71] FaHCSIA,
Youth in Communities,
<www.fahcsia.gov.au/sa/indigenous/pubs/nter_reports/ctg_monitoring_report_jan_Jul10/Documents/part2/appb.htm>
accessed 4 May 2011.
[72] Department of
Families and Housing, Community Services and Indigenous Affairs,
submission 79, p. 19.
[73] FaHCSIA,
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[74] ASC,
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[75] ASC,
submission 42, p. 11.
[76] ASC,
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[77] Ross Tanimu,
Does the promotion of sport for Aboriginal youth help reduce the
risk of offending behaviour?, Honours Thesis, Flinders University,
p. 63.
[78] Ross Tanimu,
Does the promotion of sport for Aboriginal youth help reduce the
risk of offending behaviour?, Honours Thesis, Flinders University,
p. 74.
[79] Ross Tanimu,
Does the promotion of sport for Aboriginal youth help reduce the
risk of offending behaviour?, Honours Thesis, Flinders University,
p. 61.
[80] Monsignor
David Cappo, Commissioner for Social Inclusion, To Break the Cycle:
Prevention and rehabilitation responses to serious repeat offending
by young people, 2007, p. 37.
[81] Alison Vivian
and Eloise Schnierer, Jumbunna Indigenous House of Learning,
University of Technology Sydney, Factors affecting crime rates in
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[82] Australian
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[83] Mark Horton,
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[84] Robert
Atkinson, Queensland Police Service, Committee Hansard, Sydney, 28
January 2011, p. 7.
[85] Luke
Freudenstein, New South Wales Police, Committee Hansard, Sydney, 28
January 2011, p. 35.
[86] Midnight
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[87] Rosemary
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[88] Minister for
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[89] Shane
Phillips, Tribal Warrior Association, Committee Hansard, Sydney, 28
January 2011, p. 11.
[90] Joan Baptie,
Children’s Court of New South Wales, Committee Hansard,
Sydney, 28 January 2011, p. 10.
[91] Australian
Human Rights Commission, submission 30, attachment A, p. 5.
[92] Alison Vivian
and Eloise Schnierer, Jumbunna Indigenous House of Learning,
University of Technology Sydney, Factors affecting crime rates in
Indigenous communities in NSW: a pilot study in Bourke and
Lightning Ridge, November 2010, p. 21.
[93] Ms Serene
Fernando, exhibit 12, p. 1.
[94] Alison Vivian
and Eloise Schnierer, Jumbunna Indigenous House of Learning,
University of Technology Sydney, Factors affecting crime rates in
Indigenous communities in NSW: a pilot study in Bourke and
Lightning Ridge, November 2010, p. 71.
[95] Steering
Committee for the Review of Government Service Provision, Report on
Government Services 2009, Indigenous Compendium, p. 233.
[96] Steering
Committee for the Review of Government Service Provision, Report on
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[97] Katherine
McFarlane, New South Wales Corrective Services Women’s
Advisory Council, Committee Hansard, Sydney, 28 January 2011,
pp. 15 & 58.
[98] Parliament of
Victoria Drugs and Crime Prevention Committee, Inquiry into
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People – Final Report, July 2009, p. 117.
[99] Katherine
McFarlane, New South Wales Corrective Services Women’s
Advisory Council, Committee Hansard, Canberra, 24 June 2010,
pp. 5‑9.
[100] Kerry
Chant, New South Wales Health, Committee Hansard, Canberra, 24 June
2010, p. 50.
[101] Victoria
Legal Aid, submission 39, p. 4.
[102] Tirkandi
Inaburra Cultural and Development Centre
<www.tirkandi.org.au/index.html> accessed 14 October
2010.
[103] New South
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p. 4.
[104] FaHCSIA,
National Standards for out of home care
<www.fahcsia.gov.au/sa/families/pubs/nat_std_4_outofhomecare/Pages/default.aspx>
accessed 13 April 2011.
[105] FaHCSIA,
submission 79a, p. 6.
[106] FaHCSIA,
Australian, State and Territory Governments working together to
reduce Indigenous homelessness,
<www.fahcsia.gov.au/sa/housing/progserv/homelessness/
national_partnership_agreement/Pages/NPAHomelessness.aspx >
accessed 28 July 2010.
[107] FaHCSIA,
submission 79a, pp. 7-8.
[108] FaHCSIA,
submission 79a, p. 8.
[109] FaHCSIA,
National Partnership Agreement on Social Housing
<www.fahcsia.gov.au/sa/housing/progserv/affordability/affordablehousing/Pages/NPASocialHousing.aspx>
accessed 6 April 2011.
[110] FaHCSIA,
Strategic Indigenous Housing and Infrastructure Program,
<www.fahcsia.gov.au/sa/indigenous/progserv/housing/Pages/sihip.aspx>
accessed 6 April 2011.
[111] Department
of Families, Housing, Community Services and Indigenous Affairs,
Alice Springs Transformation Plan,
<www.fahcsia.gov.au/sa/indigenous/
progserv/AS_transformation/Pages/default.aspx> accessed 6 April
2011.
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