Who does Australia Lock Up? The Social Determinants of Justice

IF 1.8 Q2 CRIMINOLOGY & PENOLOGY
Ruth McCausland, E. Baldry
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Crime rates are generally decreasing and governments in Australia (as elsewhere) have committed to reducing recidivism. However, incarceration rates of certain groups continue to rise, including Indigenous and racialised peoples, those experiencing poverty, mental health issues, addiction, homelessness and people with cognitive disability. A large proportion are in custody for minor offences and/or not yet sentenced; however, political leaders have continued to defend their detention on the grounds of risk to community safety. The sudden drop in people incarcerated during the COVID-19 pandemic, without a commensurate rise in crime rates, highlighted the degree to which incarceration rates are a matter of policy decisions. For a time, public health priorities dominated criminal legal policies. Evidence on the social determinants of health that people experiencing social, economic, political and environmental disadvantage are more likely to experience poorer health outcomes has led to acceptance globally that public health policies must address systemic factors and not just focus on individual behaviour. In this article, we propose that a conceptual framework of the social determinants of justice could valuably inform efforts to reduce the criminalisation and incarceration of targeted and disadvantaged groups.
澳大利亚关谁?正义的社会决定因素
犯罪率普遍下降,澳大利亚政府(和其他地方一样)致力于减少再犯。然而,某些群体的监禁率继续上升,包括土著和种族化人民、贫困、精神健康问题、吸毒、无家可归者和认知残疾者。很大一部分人因轻微罪行而被拘留和/或尚未判刑;然而,政治领导人继续以对社区安全构成威胁为由为拘留他们辩护。在2019冠状病毒病大流行期间,被监禁人数突然下降,而犯罪率却没有相应上升,这突显出监禁率在多大程度上与政策决定有关。有一段时间,公共卫生优先事项主导了刑事法律政策。关于健康的社会决定因素的证据表明,处于社会、经济、政治和环境不利地位的人更有可能经历较差的健康结果,这导致全球接受公共卫生政策必须解决系统因素,而不仅仅是关注个人行为。在本文中,我们提出,司法社会决定因素的概念框架可以为减少目标群体和弱势群体的刑事定罪和监禁提供有价值的信息。
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
2.70
自引率
7.70%
发文量
50
审稿时长
9 weeks
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