Indigenous people in Australia and New Zealand and the intergenerational effects of incarceration
Roettger, Mike
Indigenous people in Australia and New Zealand and the intergenerational effects of incarceration Mike Roettger, Krystal Lockwood and Susan Dennison - Sydney, Australia : Indigenous Justice Clearinghouse, Attorney General's Department of New South Wales; Australian Institute of Criminology 2019 - electronic document (7 pages) ; PDF file - Research brief .
Research brief, 26, December 2019
Indigenous Australians are imprisoned at the highest rate of any people in the world (Anthony, 2017) and at a rate 16 times higher than non-Indigenous Australians (Australian Bureau of Statistics, 2018). Meanwhile, the Māori in Aotearoa New Zealand are imprisoned at 7 times the rate of the general population (New Zealand Department of Corrections, 2019). These disproportional rates of imprisonment lead to disproportional impacts on Indigenous and Māori children. In Australia, studies have estimated that 20% of Indigenous children experience paternal imprisonment in both New South Wales (NSW) and Queensland (Dennison, Stewart, & Freiberg, 2013; Quilty et al, 2004), while 20% of Indigenous children in Western Australia experience maternal imprisonment (Dowell, Preen, & Segal, 2017). Māori children are also disproportionately impacted, with an estimated 40% of children between ages 6-14 experiencing a parent serve a custodial or community sentence (Ball et al, 2016).
Experience of parental incarceration compounds existing adversities in the lives of many children whose parents offend and is associated with an increased risk of antisocial behaviour and imprisonment, mental and physical health issues, substance use, academic difficulties, and social marginalisation or exclusion in offspring (Murray, Bijleveld, Farrington, & Loeber, 2014; Wildeman, Goldman, & Turney, 2018; Besemer & Dennison, 2018). These impacts hold true for Indigenous children who are also more likely to experience residential instability, abuse and neglect, and poverty (Ball et al, 2016). The effects of parental imprisonment may extend from birth to death, and across multiple generations and kinship networks. In this research brief, we review existing research and interventions for improving outcomes of Indigenous children who experience parental imprisonment. Supporting children and their families is one way to disrupt the intergenerational impacts of incarceration. We identify the types of programs and policies required to reduce the impact of parental imprisonment on Indigenous children. (From the website). Record #6550
INDIGENOUS PEOPLES
ADVERSE CHILDHOOD EXPERIENCES
CHILDREN OF PRISONERS
PRISONERS
MAUHERE
ABORIGINAL & TORRES STRAIT ISLANDER PEOPLES
IWI TAKETAKE
JUSTICE
MĀORI
POLICY
PROGRAMMES
PŪNAHA TURE TAIHARA
TANGATA HARA
NEW ZEALAND
AUSTRALIA
Indigenous people in Australia and New Zealand and the intergenerational effects of incarceration Mike Roettger, Krystal Lockwood and Susan Dennison - Sydney, Australia : Indigenous Justice Clearinghouse, Attorney General's Department of New South Wales; Australian Institute of Criminology 2019 - electronic document (7 pages) ; PDF file - Research brief .
Research brief, 26, December 2019
Indigenous Australians are imprisoned at the highest rate of any people in the world (Anthony, 2017) and at a rate 16 times higher than non-Indigenous Australians (Australian Bureau of Statistics, 2018). Meanwhile, the Māori in Aotearoa New Zealand are imprisoned at 7 times the rate of the general population (New Zealand Department of Corrections, 2019). These disproportional rates of imprisonment lead to disproportional impacts on Indigenous and Māori children. In Australia, studies have estimated that 20% of Indigenous children experience paternal imprisonment in both New South Wales (NSW) and Queensland (Dennison, Stewart, & Freiberg, 2013; Quilty et al, 2004), while 20% of Indigenous children in Western Australia experience maternal imprisonment (Dowell, Preen, & Segal, 2017). Māori children are also disproportionately impacted, with an estimated 40% of children between ages 6-14 experiencing a parent serve a custodial or community sentence (Ball et al, 2016).
Experience of parental incarceration compounds existing adversities in the lives of many children whose parents offend and is associated with an increased risk of antisocial behaviour and imprisonment, mental and physical health issues, substance use, academic difficulties, and social marginalisation or exclusion in offspring (Murray, Bijleveld, Farrington, & Loeber, 2014; Wildeman, Goldman, & Turney, 2018; Besemer & Dennison, 2018). These impacts hold true for Indigenous children who are also more likely to experience residential instability, abuse and neglect, and poverty (Ball et al, 2016). The effects of parental imprisonment may extend from birth to death, and across multiple generations and kinship networks. In this research brief, we review existing research and interventions for improving outcomes of Indigenous children who experience parental imprisonment. Supporting children and their families is one way to disrupt the intergenerational impacts of incarceration. We identify the types of programs and policies required to reduce the impact of parental imprisonment on Indigenous children. (From the website). Record #6550
INDIGENOUS PEOPLES
ADVERSE CHILDHOOD EXPERIENCES
CHILDREN OF PRISONERS
PRISONERS
MAUHERE
ABORIGINAL & TORRES STRAIT ISLANDER PEOPLES
IWI TAKETAKE
JUSTICE
MĀORI
POLICY
PROGRAMMES
PŪNAHA TURE TAIHARA
TANGATA HARA
NEW ZEALAND
AUSTRALIA