Pathways through youth justice supervision
Citation
AIHW
Australian Institute of Health and Welfare (2014) Pathways through youth justice supervision, AIHW, Australian Government, accessed 06 November 2024.
APA
Australian Institute of Health and Welfare. (2014). Pathways through youth justice supervision. Canberra: AIHW.
MLA
Australian Institute of Health and Welfare. Pathways through youth justice supervision. AIHW, 2014.
Vancouver
Australian Institute of Health and Welfare. Pathways through youth justice supervision. Canberra: AIHW; 2014.
Harvard
Australian Institute of Health and Welfare 2014, Pathways through youth justice supervision, AIHW, Canberra.
PDF | 1.7MB
Pathways through youth justice supervision explores the types of youth justice supervision experienced by particular cohorts of young people based on data available from the Juvenile Justice National Minimum Data Set (JJ NMDS) from 2000–01 to 2012–13. The report found that the top 10 pathways accounted for nearly three quarters (71%) of young people who experienced supervision. It also found that young males, young Indigenous people, those aged 10–14 at first supervision and those experiencing sentenced detention at some point were more likely than their counterparts to have more complex and varied pathways through supervision.
- ISBN: 978-1-74249-596-5
- Cat. no: JUV 40
- Pages: 36
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The 10 most common supervision pathways accounted for 71% of young people who experienced youth justice supervision
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52% of young people who were supervised only experienced 1 type of youth justice supervision
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Young people whose supervision history contained some form of detention had more varied and complex pathways
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Young people who were male, Indigenous or aged 10–14 at first supervision had more complex and serious pathways