Mr Papalia asks about recidivism rates for female juvenile Indigenous offenders. The answer provides one statistic and declines to answer the rest due to statistical insignificance without specifying release years.

AnsweredQoN 148Legislative Assembly
Asked
7 May 2013
Portfolio
Corrective Services

QuestionView source ↗

(1) What percentage of female juvenile indigenous offenders re-offend, resulting in a new custodial sentence, after having completed their first custodial sentence (including each exit and/or return, but excluding imprisonment for fine default only and returns for fine default or breach early release order)?
(2) What percentage of female juvenile indigenous offenders re-offend within one year of release, resulting in a new custodial sentence, after having completed their first custodial sentence?
(3) What percentage of female juvenile indigenous offenders re-offend within two years of release, resulting in a new custodial sentence, after having completed their first custodial sentence?
(4) What percentage of female juvenile indigenous offenders re-offend within five years of release, resulting in a new custodial sentence, after having completed their first custodial sentence?

AnswerView source ↗

Answered
12 June 2013
Responded by
Minister for Corrective Services
Response time
36 days
(1) 54.17% of female juvenile Indigenous offenders who were released on or
after 1 January 2001 returned to either juvenile detention or adult custody. 1
January 2001 is the earliest date of available juvenile records on the record
keeping system.
(2)-(4) Any data provided for a particular year of release for offenders
would not be statistically significant without having a discrete series of
years in order to make a comparison. The Member may wish to specify a release
year or a series of years in order for statistical comparisons between release
cohorts to be made.

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