Australia lacks vital prison data: report
MELBOURNE, Feb. 26 (Xinhua) -- The absence of basic public
information on the number of prisoners moving through the
Australian correctional system is unacceptable, according to a new
report released on Thursday.
Despite more than 2.25 billion U.S. dollars being spent on
Australian prisons each year, no data on how many Australians are
imprisoned and released each year is available to the public.
Instead, the Australian Bureau of Statistics, releases reports
that provide snapshots of the population numbers and
characteristics on the first day of each month.
That needs to change, said Alex Avery and Stuart Kinner from the
University of Melbourne, and the single-day snapshots under-
represent those on shorter terms, leading to misdirected funding
and less-than-ideal support services.
"In other large, state-based systems such as public hospitals
and schools, accurate throughput data are readily available to the
general public," Kinner said in a press statement on Thursday.
"Yet, despite a recurring public investment of more than 3
billion Australian dollars a year, equivalent data are not
available for Australia's correctional systems. This has to change.
"
Using New South Wales data and applying it to the whole country,
the pair estimated 38,500 prisoners left Australian prisons in
2013, which is 25 percent higher than the statistics agency's
figure of 30,750 presented as the average daily population.
Ewen said if the state and federal government was serious about
closing the gap between Indigenous Australians and the average
population, it needed accurate and public data to properly
understand how many people cycle through prison.
"We know that every time someone is released from prison, their
risk of preventable death increases," Ewen said. Enditem