A robust estimate of the number and characteristics of persons released from prison in Australia

Abstract Objective: To estimate the number and characteristics of adults released from prison in Australia. Method: We calculated ratios, stratified by age, sex and Indigenous status, by comparing the number of persons released from prison in New South Wales (NSW), with the number in NSW prisons on...

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Main Authors: Alex Avery, Stuart A. Kinner
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2015-08-01
Series:Australian and New Zealand Journal of Public Health
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1111/1753-6405.12346
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spelling doaj-b898502ac79b4ca798927992dc00d8b82020-11-24T21:32:33ZengWileyAustralian and New Zealand Journal of Public Health1326-02001753-64052015-08-0139431531810.1111/1753-6405.12346A robust estimate of the number and characteristics of persons released from prison in AustraliaAlex Avery0Stuart A. Kinner1School of Population and Global Health, University of Melbourne VictoriaSchool of Population and Global Health, University of Melbourne VictoriaAbstract Objective: To estimate the number and characteristics of adults released from prison in Australia. Method: We calculated ratios, stratified by age, sex and Indigenous status, by comparing the number of persons released from prison in New South Wales (NSW), with the number in NSW prisons on 30 June of the corresponding year. These stratified ratios were applied to Australia‐wide prison data to estimate the number and characteristics of persons released annually. Results: We estimated that in 2013, 38,576 persons were released from prison in Australia − 25.3% more than the daily prison population. Young people, Indigenous people and women were over‐represented among those released. We estimated that 3.69 Indigenous women aged 18–24 were released annually for each equivalent person in prison; and 2.75 non‐Indigenous women aged 18–24 were released annually for each equivalent person in prison. Conclusions: The annual ‘flow’ through Australia's prisons is well in excess of the daily number, but information on those moving through prison systems is not yet publicly available. The characteristics of those released from prison differ meaningfully from those of people in prison. Routine, national reporting of prison separations is critical to informing upscaling and targeting of Throughcare services for this profoundly vulnerable population.https://doi.org/10.1111/1753-6405.12346prisonpublic healthdemographyplanningprisoners
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Alex Avery
Stuart A. Kinner
spellingShingle Alex Avery
Stuart A. Kinner
A robust estimate of the number and characteristics of persons released from prison in Australia
Australian and New Zealand Journal of Public Health
prison
public health
demography
planning
prisoners
author_facet Alex Avery
Stuart A. Kinner
author_sort Alex Avery
title A robust estimate of the number and characteristics of persons released from prison in Australia
title_short A robust estimate of the number and characteristics of persons released from prison in Australia
title_full A robust estimate of the number and characteristics of persons released from prison in Australia
title_fullStr A robust estimate of the number and characteristics of persons released from prison in Australia
title_full_unstemmed A robust estimate of the number and characteristics of persons released from prison in Australia
title_sort robust estimate of the number and characteristics of persons released from prison in australia
publisher Wiley
series Australian and New Zealand Journal of Public Health
issn 1326-0200
1753-6405
publishDate 2015-08-01
description Abstract Objective: To estimate the number and characteristics of adults released from prison in Australia. Method: We calculated ratios, stratified by age, sex and Indigenous status, by comparing the number of persons released from prison in New South Wales (NSW), with the number in NSW prisons on 30 June of the corresponding year. These stratified ratios were applied to Australia‐wide prison data to estimate the number and characteristics of persons released annually. Results: We estimated that in 2013, 38,576 persons were released from prison in Australia − 25.3% more than the daily prison population. Young people, Indigenous people and women were over‐represented among those released. We estimated that 3.69 Indigenous women aged 18–24 were released annually for each equivalent person in prison; and 2.75 non‐Indigenous women aged 18–24 were released annually for each equivalent person in prison. Conclusions: The annual ‘flow’ through Australia's prisons is well in excess of the daily number, but information on those moving through prison systems is not yet publicly available. The characteristics of those released from prison differ meaningfully from those of people in prison. Routine, national reporting of prison separations is critical to informing upscaling and targeting of Throughcare services for this profoundly vulnerable population.
topic prison
public health
demography
planning
prisoners
url https://doi.org/10.1111/1753-6405.12346
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