4.3 Article

Sentencing, Domestic Violence, and the Overrepresentation of Indigenous Australians: Does Court Location Matter?

Journal

JOURNAL OF INTERPERSONAL VIOLENCE
Volume 36, Issue 21-22, Pages 10588-10613

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/0886260519885916

Keywords

domestic violence; cultural contexts; anything related to domestic violence; domestic violence and cultural contexts; criminology; legal intervention

Funding

  1. University of Queensland Collaboration and Industry Engagement Fund Grant (UQ CIEF/2015)

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Research indicates disparities in sentencing for Indigenous and non-Indigenous populations in relation to domestic violence cases in Australia, with harsher penalties more frequently used for Indigenous defendants. While ensuring the safety of Indigenous women is crucial, supporting a harsher sentencing regime for DVO breaches is deemed ineffective, emphasizing the need for flexible strategies within and for Indigenous communities in Australia.
The significant overrepresentation of Indigenous people in Australian prisons has been the subject of numerous studies. In this article, we build on recent research suggesting that sentencing in domestic violence cases might be an important contributor to this overrepresentation of Indigenous people. We broaden the existing research by examining differences for Indigenous and non-Indigenous defendants in domestic violence cases across a range of sentencing outcomes including imprisonment, probation, fines, and good behavior orders. We also consider whether the degree of geographic remoteness of the court influences these sentencing outcomes. To accomplish this, we use administrative court data from Queensland, Australia, and employ a multinomial hierarchical modeling strategy appropriate for nested court-level multilevel data. The findings further support recent Australian research suggesting that there are sentencing disparities for Indigenous and non-Indigenous people in relation to domestic violence, and in particular, that harsher sentences such as imprisonment are disproportionately reserved for Indigenous defendants. Our research demonstrates that these disparities in the likelihood of imprisonment occur irrespective of defendants' domestic violence protection order (DVO) breach histories and the location of the sentencing court. Based on the findings, we conclude with a discussion of possible ways forward. Although there is no question that Indigenous women should be safe and free from violence, supporting a harsher sentencing regime for those who breach DVOs is not effective. Instead, we argue that flexible strategies that work within and for Indigenous communities in Australia are required.

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