Organisation
Crime Statistics Agency (Vic)
Owning Institution:
Report
Identifying the differences between generalist and specialist family violence perpetrators: risk factors and perpetrator characteristics
Some previous approaches to family violence offenders have assumed that these offenders exclusively commit violent offences against partners or family members and do not commit other types of crime. This is known as ‘specialisation’ in offending. A substantial amount of research has been conducted examining specialisation in criminal offending, but fewer studies have focused on...
Briefing paper
Family violence, alcohol consumption and the likelihood of criminal offences
Alcohol is involved in a substantial number of family violence incidents recorded by police. However, there is a paucity of Australian research on the relative contribution of alcohol use by perpetrators and/or victims to whether or not the incident results in the perpetrator being arrested for or charged with a criminal offence. This study involved...
Report
Patterns of recorded offending behaviour amongst young Victorian offenders
Previous research has identified that groups of young offenders follow diverse offending trajectories over their early offending careers. This paper uses a statistical technique, the semi-parametric group-based method, to identify the latent offending trajectories of a cohort of Victorian offenders born over a two year period between April 1996 and March 1998, across the first...
Discussion paper
Consultation paper: Improving recorded crime statistics for Victoria's Aboriginal community
The Crime Statistics Agency does not currently release recorded crime statistics relating to Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait Islander status in our main releases due to concerns we have with high proportions of missing or unknown data based on self-identification. The agency has been exploring options for calculating a person's Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander status...
Briefing paper
Predictors of recidivism amongst police recorded family violence perpetrators
This study sought to analyse the relationship between repeat family incidents, and factors that may predict such incidents including alleged perpetrator characteristics and L17 risk factors recorded by police.