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Report

Homelessness and housing stress among police detainees: results from the DUMA program


This research reaffirms the need for intensive accommodation support services to complement criminal justice responses to crime and those who have contact with the criminal justice system. Foreword It is generally accepted that a person’s living situation, in particular their experience of homelessness and housing stress, can have both long-lasting and wide-ranging consequences. For criminal...
Report

Policing alcohol and illicit drug use among Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people in metropolitan environments


Executive summary: This report presents the results of Australian Institute of Criminology research on issues and challenges of policing alcohol and illicit drug use among Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people in metropolitan environments. This report is a companion to the 2006 National Drug Law Enforcement Research Fund project The policing implications of cannabis, amphetamine...
Report

‘Initiation into drug use’ addendum: findings from the DUMA program


The age at which an individual first experiments with illicit drugs has been of significant interest to policymakers and practitioners, primarily because research has persistently shown a link between early juvenile onset of drug use and less favourable health and criminal justice outcomes in adulthood. drug users who have regular contact with the criminal justice...
Report

Drug use among police detainees: a comparative analysis of DUMA and the US arrestee drug abuse monitoring program


Monitoring international trends in drug production and supply has been a key function of the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC); it regularly provides between-country comparative data in the World Drug Report and the Global Illicit Drug Trends Report. These data, typically on drug detections and drug-related arrests, are combined with intelligence and...
Report

Illicit drug use and property offending among police detainees


Heavy drug use, of either amphetamines or opioids in the 30 days prior to arrest, is associated with frequency of property offending. Aim: The primary objective of the current study was to examine whether the frequency of recent illicit drug use is related to higher levels of offending among police detainees in Australia. In particular...

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