Tasmania

This section summarises key findings of young people under youth justice supervision for Tasmania, including the number and rate of young people under community-based supervision and in detention. It also summarises data on young people by age, sex, Indigenous status, legal status, time under supervision and contains trends.

Impact of COVID-19 on youth justice data

This report includes data from March 2020 to June 2022, which coincides with the presence of COVID-19 in Australia. However, the direct impact of COVID-19 and related social restrictions on the number of young people under youth justice supervision is difficult to determine due to a range of factors and more research is required.

Number and rate

On an average day in 2023–24, in Tasmania:

  • 123 young people aged 10 and over were under youth justice supervision (Table S136a)
  • almost 9 in 10 (87%) were supervised in the community (Table S136b), and the rest (13%) in detention (Table S136c)
  • the rate of supervision was 17 per 10,000 young people aged 10–17 (Table S137a)
  • 15 per 10,000 young people aged 10–17 were under community-based supervision (Table S137b), and 2.9 per 10,000 were in detention (Table S137c).

Age and sex

On an average day in 2023–24, in Tasmania:

  • 76% of those under supervision were aged 10–17, and the rest were 18 and over
  • 74% of those under supervision were male
  • males under supervision were most likely to be aged 17, while females were most likely to be aged 16 (Figure 16.1; Table S136a).

Figure 16.1: Number of young people under supervision (any type) on an average day, by age, sex and Indigenous status, Tasmania, 2023–24

An interactive chart shows that young males under youth justice supervision were generally older than young females in Tasmania in 2023–24.

An interactive chart shows that young males under youth justice supervision were generally older than young females in Tasmania in 2023–24.

Notes

  1. Age categories are not presented where they represent averages that are equal to or rounded to 0.0.
  2. Total includes young people of unknown age, sex and Indigenous status.
  3. Number of young people under community-based supervision and in detention may not sum to total number under supervision as young people may be under community-based supervision and in detention on the same day and may be in different age groups.
  4. Age on an average day is calculated based on the age a young person is each day that they are under supervision. If a young person changes age during a period of supervision, then the average daily number under supervision will reflect this. Average daily data broken down by age will not be comparable to Youth justice in Australia releases prior to 2019–20.
  5. The equivalent 'during the year' table or unique counts of young people is not published due to small numbers, confidentiality, and/or reliability concerns.

Source: Youth Justice National Minimum Data Set 2023–24

First Nations young people

On an average day in 2023–24, in Tasmania:

  • First Nations young people made up 11% of those aged 10–17 in the general population, but 36% (or 34) of those of the same age under supervision (tables S136a and S143)
  • a similar proportion of First Nations young people aged 10–17 were under community-based supervision (37% or 29) and detention (33% or 5.1) (tables S136b and S136c)
  • First Nations young people aged 10–17 were about 4 times as likely as non-Indigenous young people to be under supervision (55 per 10,000 compared with 12 per 10,000) (Table S137a)
  • First Nations over-representation was similar in community-based supervision (about 5 times the non-Indigenous rate) and detention (about 4 times the non-Indigenous rate) (Table S137b).

Time under supervision

In 2023–24, in Tasmania:

  • completed periods of supervision lasted a median length of 183 days (about 26 weeks) (Table S29)
  • when all time spent under supervision during the year is considered, young people spent an average of 199 days (about 28 weeks) under supervision (Table S30).

Sentenced and unsentenced detention

On an average day in 2023–24, in Tasmania:

  • 80% of young people in detention were unsentenced – that is, they were awaiting the outcome of their court matter, or had been found guilty and were awaiting sentencing
  • about 1 in 4 (24%) young people in detention were serving a sentence (proportions might not sum to 100% because some young people were in sentenced and unsentenced detention on the same day) (Table S108a).

Over the 5 years to 2023–24, on an average day in Tasmania:

  • the number of young people under supervision fell overall by 16% from 146 in 2019–20 to 123 in 2023–24 (Table S136a), while the rate fell from 22 to 17 per 10,000 young people aged 10–17 (Table S15a)
  • in community-based supervision, the number fell overall by 18% (Table S136b), while the rate fell from 19 to 15 per 10,000 (Figure 16.2; Table S48a)
  • in detention, the number rose slightly from 15 in 2019–20 to 16 in 2023–24 (Table S136c), while the rate rose from 2.7 to 2.9 per 10,000 (Figure 16.2; Table S86a)
  • the rate for First Nations young people under supervision fell from 67 to 55 per 10,000 (Figure 16.2; Table S12a).

Figure 16.2: Rate of young people aged 10–17 under supervision on an average day, by supervision type, Tasmania, 2019–20 to 2023–24

An interactive chart shows an overall decline in the rate of youth justice supervision in Tasmania over the last 5 years, driven by community-based supervision. Rates fluctuated over this period.

An interactive chart shows an overall decline in the rate of youth justice supervision in Tasmania over the last 5 years, driven by community-based supervision. Rates fluctuated over this period.

Notes

  1. Total includes young people of unknown age, sex and Indigenous status.
  2. Number of young people under community-based supervision and in detention may not sum to total number under supervision as young people may be under community-based supervision and in detention on the same day and may be in different age groups.
  3. Age on an average day is calculated based on the age a young person is each day that they are under supervision. If a young person changes age during a period of supervision, then the average daily number under supervision will reflect this. Average daily data broken down by age will not be comparable to Youth justice in Australia releases prior to 2019–20.
  4. The equivalent 'during the year' table or unique counts of young people is not published due to due to small numbers, confidentiality, and/or reliability concerns.
  5. Rates are number of young people per 10,000 relevant population.

Source: Youth Justice National Minimum Data Set (YJ NMDS) 2023–24

More information

This overview is part of the Youth justice in Australia 2023–24 release, which includes a report and supplementary data tables.

Together, these provide comprehensive information about young people under youth justice supervision in Australia due to their involvement, or alleged involvement, in crime.

For more information see the topic Youth justice.