Indigenous Experience Reports: Addressing Silence and Deficit Discourse in Sentencing

IF 1.2 Q1 LAW
A. Hopkins, T. Anthony, L. Bartels, Sinead Allen, Emma Henke
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

The hyper-incarceration of Indigenous Australians urges analysis of unconscious bias, the application of criminogenic risk assumptions, and structural impediments to consideration of Indigenous experience in sentencing. Disrupting deficit-based discourses requires new approaches to sentencing, in which First Nations voices are heard. This article examines all 149 sentences delivered in the Supreme Court of the Australian Capital Territory between 2009 and 2019, in which the defendant’s Indigenous status was identifiable. We consider the extent and nature of engagement with Indigenous experience, finding a prevailing silence and limited evidence of strengths-based approaches. We argue that listening to First Nations voices in sentencing can provide a counterpoint to deficit discourses and a holistic understanding of the individual and their background, including the ongoing relevance of colonisation in their lives. The use of Indigenous Experience Reports to enable this listening may also promote strengths-based considerations and challenge the efficacy of carceral options.
本土经验报告:解决量刑中的沉默与缺失话语
澳大利亚土著人的过度监禁促使人们分析无意识的偏见、犯罪风险假设的应用,以及在量刑时考虑土著人经历的结构性障碍。破坏基于赤字的话语需要新的量刑方法,在这种方法中可以听到第一民族的声音。本文审查了2009年至2019年间在澳大利亚首都地区最高法院作出的所有149项判决,其中被告的土著身份是可识别的。我们考虑了与土著经验接触的程度和性质,发现了普遍的沉默和基于优势的方法的有限证据。我们认为,在判决中倾听第一民族的声音可以与不足的话语形成对比,并对个人及其背景进行全面理解,包括殖民主义在他们生活中的持续相关性。使用土著经验报告来进行这种倾听也可能促进基于优势的考虑,并挑战尸体选择的有效性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.30
自引率
7.70%
发文量
25
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