Criminal justice reform: Lessons from the United States is the second major research report from the IPA’s Criminal Justice Project.
The report can be found here.
Criminal justice reform: Lessons from the United States is the second major research report from the IPA’s Criminal Justice Project.
The report can be found here.
The testimony of Andrew Bushnell and Darcy Allen was mentioned numerous times in the final report of the Senate inquiry into penalties for white collar crime, which was released on 23 March 2017.
The below is the media release about our appearance on 6 December 2016. Continue reading
This research report was co-authored by Andrew Bushnell, Morgan Begg, Chris Berg, Simon Breheny, and Sab Reinehr for the Institute of Public Affairs. Continue reading
The use of prisons in Australia: Reform directions is the first major report from the Institute of Public Affairs Criminal Justice Project. It was co-authored by Andrew Bushnell and Daniel Wild. Continue reading
This letter was submitted to the Royal Commission that was announced following a Four Corners report on juvenile detention conditions in the Northern Territory.
The central contention of this submission is that while there is rightly significant community concern about the operation of youth justice facilities in the Northern Territory, this concern should not be used to indict the entire youth justice system in the Territory. Underlying the problems affecting these facilities are social, economic, and cultural factors that better explain the unique aspects of youth justice in the Northern Territory than do blanket denunciations of institutional prejudice.
Nonetheless, there is good reason to believe that Australia’s criminal justice system as a whole is failing the public. This submission concludes by placing the problems of the Northern Territory’s youth justice system in the context of the growing need for criminal justice reform in Australia.