Socio-economic outcome area 10

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander adults are not overrepresented in the criminal justice system

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Driver

Proportion of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people charged by police

Dashboard snapshot: The data below are the most recent at the time of preparing the July 2023 report. Please go to the dashboard to access the current data.

Measure 1

Rate of adults charged by police

In 2021-22, across the three jurisdictions with available data, the rate of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander adults charged by police at least once in the previous 12 months ranged from 5816 per 100 000 adults in the population to 8643 per 100 000.

Since the 2018-19 baseline year, the direction of change for these rates has differed across jurisdictions (figure SE10a.1).

Figure SE10a.1 shows adults charged by police at least once in the previous 12 months, Rate per 100 000 adults, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people, by jurisdiction, by year. More details can be found within the text near this image.
Data in figure SE10a.1 (rate)
YearNSWVicQldWASATasACTNTAust
2018-196154.7np9547.0npnpnp4816.2npnp
2019-206363.5np9458.2npnpnp5249.4npnp
2020-217147.1np9242.2npnpnp5487.4npnp
2021-228069.7np8643.4npnpnp5816.1npnp

np Not published.  

Measure 2

Proportion of police proceedings against adults that are court actions

In 2021-22, across the three jurisdictions with available data, for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander adults proceeded against by police, the proportion proceeded against with court actions ranged from 95.1 to 99.0 per cent (with 1.0 to 4.2 per cent proceeded against with non-court actions).

Since the 2018-19 baseline year, the change in proportions between court and non-court action has remained within 2 percentage points for all three jurisdictions (figure SE10a.2).

Figure SE10a.2 shows proceedings by police against adults, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people, by jurisdiction, by year, by method of proceeding. More details can be found within the text near this image.
Data in figure SE10a.2 (%)
YearDescription4NSWVicQldWASATasACTNTAust
2018-19Non-court action1.3np3.0npnpnp6.6npnp
Court action98.7np97.0npnpnp93.7npnp
2019-20Non-court action1.2np2.9npnpnp6.2npnp
Court action98.8np97.1npnpnp94.2npnp
2020-21Non-court action1.1np3.6npnpnp6.3npnp
Court action98.9np96.4npnpnp93.0npnp
2021-22Non-court action1.0np4.2npnpnp3.5npnp
Court action99.0np95.8npnpnp95.1npnp

np Not published.  

Indicator data specifications

Indicator SE10a: People charged by police

Related outcome:

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people are not overrepresented in the criminal justice system.

Related target:

By 2031, reduce the rate of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander adults held in incarceration by at least 15 per cent.

Indicator:

Proportion of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people charged by police.

Measure:

There are two measures for this indicator.

Measure 1 is the rate of adults charged by police (with one or more court actions), defined as:

Numerator — number of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people aged 18 years or over proceeded against by police at least once in the previous 12 months where the principal method of proceeding was a court action

Denominator — number of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people aged 18 years or over at 31 December

and is presented as a rate per 100 000 people aged 18 years or over.

Measure 2 is the proportion of police proceedings against people aged 18 years or over that are court actions, defined as:

Numerator — number of police proceedings against Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people aged 18 years or over, by method of proceeding (court/non-court action)

Denominator — number of police proceedings against Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people aged 18 years or over

and is presented as a percentage.

Indicator established:

National Agreement on Closing the Gap July 2020

Latest dashboard update for the indicator:

15 June 2023

Indicator type:

Driver

Interpretation of change:

Measure 1: a low or decreasing rate is desirable.

Measure 2: holding the number of proceedings constant, a low or decreasing proportion is desirable.

Data source(s):

(Measure 2 and numerator for Measure 1)

Name: Recorded Crime – Offenders

Frequency: Annual

Documentation (links): https://www.abs.gov.au/statistics/people/crime-and-justice/recorded-crime-offenders

(Denominator for Measure 1)

Name: Estimates and projections for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander population

Frequency: Annual (data revised on a five-yearly basis)

Documentation: https://www.abs.gov.au/statistics/people/aboriginal-and-torres-strait-islander-peoples/estimates-and-projections-aboriginal-and-torres-strait-islander-australians

Data provider:

(Measure 2 and numerator for Measure 1)

Provider name: Australian Bureau of Statistics

Provider area: National Centre for Crime and Justice Statistics

(Denominator for Measure 1)

Provider name: Australian Bureau of Statistics

Provider area: Demography

Baseline year:

2018-19

Latest reporting period:

2021-22

Disaggregations:

State and territory and Australia, by Indigenous status.

Computation:

Measure 1: Numerator divided by Denominator multiplied by 100 000.

Measure 2: Numerator divided by Denominator multiplied by 100.

Counting rules

The reference period is 1 July to 30 June.

The reported jurisdiction is the location where the offender was proceeded against by police.

Measure 1

‘People proceeded against by police’ represents a person aged 18 years or over who is proceeded against and recorded by police for one or more criminal offences. An offender is only counted once during the reference period irrespective of the number of offences committed or the number of separate occasions that police proceeded against that offender.

‘Principle method of proceeding’ is defined as the main legal action (court or non-court) initiated by police for an offender based on the ABS hierarchy of method of proceeding classification.

A person is counted in the numerator where a least once during the reference period they are recorded:

  • as having a principal method of proceeding which is a court action
  • being 18 years or over where one or more of the principal methods of proceeding was court action
  • as Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander at the ‘offender’ level.

Denominators (measure 1):

  • The Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander population is calculated for December (of the reference period) based on the average of two ABS June estimates of the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander population (based on the ABS Series B projections).
  • The non-Indigenous population is calculated by subtracting the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander population from the total population (December of the reference period).

Measure 2

‘Police proceedings’ represent a count for each separate occasion within the 12‑month reference period that police initiate a legal action against an alleged offender.

Court actions by police include the following ABS codes:

  • 110 Charge and bail/remand
  • 120 Charge and summons
  • 190 Other court action, not elsewhere classified

Non-court actions by police include the following ABS codes:

  • 210 Informal caution or informal warning
  • 220 Formal caution or formal warning
  • 230 Conference
  • 240 Counselling (includes drug diversion schemes)
  • 250 Penalty notices
  • 290 Other non-court action, not elsewhere classified

Exclusions (all measures):

People/proceedings with an unknown or not stated Indigenous status. (Data on the number of people/proceedings whose Indigenous status was not stated is provided for context).

Data quality considerations:

ABS method of proceeding recorded as court action is used as a proxy for charge for this indicator.

Data values have been randomly adjusted using perturbation to avoid the release of confidential data. Discrepancies may occur between sums of the component items and totals.

The quality of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander identification varies across jurisdictions. Data are only available by Indigenous status for NSW, Queensland, SA the ACT, and the NT. Based on ABS assessment, Indigenous status data for other jurisdictions was not of sufficient quality and/or did not meet ABS standards for self-identification for national reporting. Due to data quality issues, data are not available for method of police proceeding (i.e. court/non-court proceedings) for SA and the NT.

Caution should be used when comparing Indigenous status data across states and territories or time periods, due to variations in the proportion of offenders with unknown Indigenous status.

Future reporting:

Additional disaggregations required for future reporting:

  • Remoteness areas and other geographic categories available
  • Socioeconomic status of the locality
  • Age
  • Gender
  • Disability status.

The Productivity Commission acknowledges the Traditional Owners of Country throughout Australia and their continuing connection to land, waters and community. We pay our respects to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Cultures, Country and Elders past and present.

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people should be aware that this website may contain images, voices or names of people who have passed away.