Indigenous Australians with Mental Health Disorders and Cognitive Disabilities in the Criminal Justice System

The over-representation of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples (Indigenous Australians) with mental health disorders and cognitive disabilities (MHDCD) in Australian criminal justice systems (CJS) is a matter of utmost importance to government, policy makers, Indigenous and non-Indigenous Australians.

The Indigenous Australians with Mental Health Disorders and Cognitive Disabilities in the Criminal Justice System (IAMHDCD) Project brings an Indigenous informed mixed method research approach to the study of this issue. Qualitative interviewed afforded new and in depth understandings from an Indigenous perspective and school education and welfare data were merged with our exsting rich dataset (MHDCD Project Dataset). The MHDCD dataset comprises data on 2,731 persons who have been in prison from Police, Corrections, Justice Health and other health areas, Courts (BOCSAR), Juvenile Justice, Legal Aid, Disability, Housing and Community Services to allow a whole of life picture of institutional involvement. The dataset was used to investigate the pathways Indigenous Australians with MHDCD take into, around and through the Human Service (HS) and CJS and their experiences of the systems and system interactions.

A predictable and preventable path: IAMHDCD Report

Indigenous Australians with Mental Health Disorders and Cognitive Disabilities in the Criminal Justice System

Report Authors: Eileen Baldry, Ruth McCausland, Leanne Dowse, Elizabeth McEntyre

Project Investigators: Eileen Baldry, Leanne Dowse, Julian Trollor, Patrick Dodson, Devon Indig

Project Researchers: Peta MacGillivray, Elizabeth McEntyre, Ruth McCausland, Han Xu, Julian Trofimovs

A Predictable and Preventable Path Report October 2015