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You are here: Home Reports & data Youth justice Young people returning to sentenced youth justice supervision 2014–15
Go to Youth justice

Young people returning to sentenced youth justice supervision 2014–15

Publication
Release Date: 22 Jul 2016
Topic: Youth justice

Citation

AIHW

Australian Institute of Health and Welfare (2016) Young people returning to sentenced youth justice supervision 2014–15, AIHW, Australian Government, accessed 07 July 2022.

APA

Australian Institute of Health and Welfare. (2016). Young people returning to sentenced youth justice supervision 2014–15. Canberra: AIHW.

MLA

Australian Institute of Health and Welfare. Young people returning to sentenced youth justice supervision 2014–15. AIHW, 2016.

Vancouver

Australian Institute of Health and Welfare. Young people returning to sentenced youth justice supervision 2014–15. Canberra: AIHW; 2016.

Harvard

Australian Institute of Health and Welfare 2016, Young people returning to sentenced youth justice supervision 2014–15, AIHW, Canberra.

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Most young people who have a supervised sentence serve only 1 sentence and do not return. For those born from 1990–91 to 1996–97, around 62% received only 1 sentence before the age of 18. The younger a person is at the time of first receiving a supervision sentence, the more likely they are to return. Of the young people aged 10–16 in 2013–14 and released from sentenced community-based supervision, around 23% returned to sentenced supervision in 6 months, and 46% returned within 12 months. Of those released from sentenced detention, 50% returned to sentenced supervision within 6 months and 74% returned within 12 months.

  • ISSN: 2205-5118 (PDF) 1833-3230 (Print)
  • ISBN: 978-1-74249-959-8
  • Cat. no: JUV 84
  • Pages: 36
Findings from this report:
  • 37% of young people who were first supervised in the community returned to sentenced supervision before age 18

  • 74% of those released from sentenced detention returned to sentenced supervision within 12 months

  • 62% of young people who received a supervised youth justice sentence when aged 10–17 received only 1 sentence

  • Indigenous young people were more likely than non-Indigenous young people to return to sentenced supervision

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Related material

  • Children and young people at risk of social exclusion: links between homelessness, child protection and juvenile justice
  • Linking SAAP, child protection and juvenile justice data: technical report
  • Using the Juvenile Justice National Minimum Data Set to measure juvenile recidivism
  • Pathways through youth justice supervision
  • Young people returning to sentenced youth justice supervision 2015
  • Pathways through youth justice supervision: further analyses
  • Youth detention population in Australia 2015
  • Youth justice in Australia 2014–15
  • Young people in child protection and under youth justice supervision 2013–14

Last updated 19/03/2018 v3.0

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