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released: 28 Mar 2007 author: AIHW media release

Juvenile justice in Australia 2004-05 provides data from the Juvenile Justice national minimum data set (NMDS), developed by the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare (AIHW) and the Australasian Juvenile Justice Administrators (AJJA). The Juvenile Justice NMDS includes information on all young people in juvenile justice supervision in Australia, both in the community and in detention. It is based on the experience of the young person within supervision, making it somewhat different to other criminal justice collections that focus on legal orders. This is the second report on the collection and presents data for 2004-05, as well as analyses of trends in community-based supervision and detention over the five years since 2000-01. It includes data on the characteristics of the young people under supervision such as age, sex and Indigenous status, and their patterns of supervision.

ISSN 1833-3230; ISBN 978 1 74024 661 3; Cat. no. JUV 2; 132pp.; Out of print

Summary

Responsibility for juvenile justice rests at state and territory level and there is marked diversity in terms of legislation, policy and practices among jurisdictions. The age when young people are considered juveniles or adults by the justice system, key policy directions, diversionary options, possible court outcomes, and specific programs and services available to young people are all areas of variation throughout Australia. The Australian Institute of Health and Welfare (AIHW) has worked with the Australasian Juvenile Justice Administrators (AJJA) to develop nationally consistent data on one part of this system, juvenile justice supervision.

This report is based on two data collections of the Juvenile Justice National Minimum Data Set (NMDS):

  • young people under juvenile justice supervision
  • juvenile justice episodes (supervision periods).

These data, which include both community-based and detention-based supervision, are collected by the AIHW from the departments in each state and territory with particular responsibility for juvenile justice. The data in this report cover the period 2004–05.

The Juvenile Justice NMDS contains information on the movement of young people through supervision and the services received. The data are presented as episodes and supervision periods (for definitions see Section 2.1.2 Episode collection). Although a young person may be subject to a number of legal orders simultaneously, the NMDS does not attempt to provide comprehensive coverage of orders. Rather, the NMDS is based on the experience of the young person under juvenile justice supervision. It reports the highest known type of supervision a young person is subject to at any given point in time, according to a hierarchy (see ‘Hierarchy of episode types’, in Section 2.1.2).

Recommended citation

AIHW 2007. Juvenile justice in Australia 2004-05. Juvenile justice series no.2. Cat. no. JUV 2. Canberra: AIHW.