Federation of Community Legal Centres Police Issues Group, ‘Who's in control? Victorian Police expenditure’ (Report, Federation of CLCs, July 1992), 15.
Nicole Rich, ‘Reclaiming Community Legal Centres: Maximizing our potential so we can help our clients reach theirs’ (Report, Victoria Law Foundation Community Legal Centre Fellowship, April 2009) 10.
4.
KirbyMichael, foreword to Katie Fraser, ‘Out of Africa and into court: The legal problems of African refugees’ (Report, Footscray CLC, July 2009) 5.
5.
McCullochJude, ‘National (In)Security Politics in Australia’ (2004) 29(2) Alternative Law Journal, 87.
6.
FarrellJames, ‘All the right moves? Police “move on” powers in Victoria’ (2009) 34(1) Alternative Law Journal24–25; WalshTamara, ‘Policing Disadvantage: Giving voice to those affected by the politics of law and order’ (2008) 33(3) Alternative Law Journal160; Equality and Human Rights Commission, ‘Stop and think: A critical review of the use of stop and search powers in England and Wales’ (Report, March 2010) 46; DolicZrinjka, ‘Race or reason? Police encounters with Young People in the Flemington Region and Surrounding Areas’ (Report, FKCLC, 2011) 8.
7.
Australian Bureau of Statistics, ‘Prisoners in Australia’ (Release 4517.0, 2009) 4; Department of Justice, Statistical Profile of the Victorian Prison System 2005–06 to 2009–10 (2010) 37; JohnsonHolly, Drugs and Crime: A Study of Incarcerated Female Offenders (Research & Public Policy Series, No 63, AIC, 2004) 78.
8.
SweeneyJosh & PayneJason, ‘Victimisation and fear of crime among a sample of police detainees: Findings from the DUMA program’ (DUMA Quarterly Report, No 17, AIC, 2011) 7
9.
The Community Legal Service Information System for 2010/11 shows that family violence is the most common problem type for which Victorian CLCs assist clients; 11 123 instances (report run, 13 July 2011).
10.
RobertsJulian, (eds), ‘Penal Populism and Public Opinion: Lessons from Five Countries’ (Oxford University Press, 2003) 61–75.
NZ Law Commission, Alcohol in our lives: Curbing the harm (2010), 21–22; ByrnesJoshua, ‘Cost effectiveness of volumetric alcohol taxation in Australia’, Medical Journal of Australia (2010) 192(8) 439–443; Treasury, Australia's Future Tax System: Report to the Treasurer (2010) 55–56.
GelbKaren, Myths and Misconceptions: Public Opinion versus Public Judgment about Sentencing (Research Paper. Sentencing Advisory Council, July 2006) 11.
15.
BealeSara Sun, ‘The News Media's Influence on Criminal Justice Policy: How Market Driven News Promotes Punitiveness’ (2007) 28William and Mary Law Review397. GelbKaren, More Myths and Misconceptions (Research Paper, Sentencing Advisory Council, September 2008) 5.
16.
Gelb, above n 14, 5.
17.
RobertsJulian, Public Opinion and Sentencing Policy in RexSue & TonryMichael (eds), Reform and Punishment: The future of sentencing (Willan Publishing, 2002) 18, 25–26.
18.
VelazquezMarisela, ‘What the public thinks about Sentencing’ (2009) 15(1) The National Legal Eagle, 9; WarnerKate, ‘Jury Sentencing Survey’ (Report to the Criminology Research Council, April 2010)
19.
GelbKaren, ‘Predictors of Punitiveness: Community Views in Victoria’ (Research Paper, Sentencing Advisory Council, July 2011) 19–20.
20.
Sweeney and Payne, above n 8, 6.
21.
Ibid7.
22.
Gelb, above n 15, 7.
23.
LovegroveAustin, ‘Public opinion, Sentencing and Lenience: An empirical study involving Judges Consulting the Community’ (2007) Criminal Law Review, 769–781, 778. The author commented, at 774, that the selection procedures ‘appear to have produced a sample well representing the major demographic groups’; See also WarnerKate, ‘Public Judgement of Sentencing: Final Results from the Tasmanian Jury Sentencing Study’ (Trends & Issues in Crime & Criminal Justice, No 407, AIC, February 2011).
24.
Summary Offences and Control of Weapons Amendment Act 2009 (Vic); Victoria, Parliamentary Debates, Legislative Council, 17 November 2009, Statement of Compatibility, 5781 (Justin Madden)