Offenders


Publications

CCLA: Canadian Civil Liberties Association · 24 April 2024 English

STILL FAILING The Deepening Crisis of Bail and Pre-Trial Detention in Canada Canadian Civil Liberties Association and the Canadian Civil Liberties Education Trust 2024 About the CCLA and CCLET The …

lenient, particularly when it comes to “repeat offenders.” Politicians and media outlets have focused on looking at using GPS trackers for domestic violence offenders” (2 September 2022), online: The Globe and Mail on-duty police officers, and “repeat” or “prolific offenders.” Across the country there was intense media and gang crimes and keeps violent, often repeat, offenders out of our communities.”135 These advocacy efforts of violence and crimes committed by “prolific offenders.” Members of the Legislative Assembly raised similar


Office of the Ombudsperson, Province of British Columbia · 23 April 2024 English

Report on the implementation of recommendations from Alone: The prolonged and repeated isolation of youth in custody 3 From the Ombudsperson The main difference between the ministry’s I am calling …

Psychiatry, “Solitary Confinement of Juvenile Offenders,” policy statement, April 2012, https://www.aacap Criminal Justice Act and incorporated into the Young Offenders Act one or more secure youth service framework


ICPC: International Centre for the Prevention of Crime · 5 April 2024 French

D’une part, l’absence de consensus autour de la notion de gangs et, par extension, de ses membres et de leurs activités pose un enjeu majeur en matière de recension du …

correlates of youth gang entry among serious juvenile offenders: A survival analysis. American Journal of Orthopsychiatry


CHRC: Canadian Human Rights Commission · 28 March 2024 English

Submission to the Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination on the occasion of its consideration of Canada’s 21st – 23rd Periodic Reports Human Rights Canadian Human Rights Commission Submission …

composition of ethnically and culturally diverse offenders. In the preceding 10 years, the Indigenous incarcerated their national representation.53 Indigenous male offenders make up 25% of the federally-incarcerated population is even more pronounced at 36%.55 Indigenous offenders are also more likely to spend more of their sentence released on parole when compared with non-Indigenous offenders.56 A web of complex and intersecting factors lie OCI of the social histories of Indigenous women offenders indicated that: 1) over half reported having attended


National Association of Women and the Law · 28 March 2024

Today, a critical indicator of the law’s relationship with Indigenous women is mass incarceration, where Indigenous women make up a mere four percent of Canada’s female population but fifty percent …

specifically to meet the needs of Indigenous offenders, have consistently been underfunded and underutilized


CHRC: Canadian Human Rights Commission · 28 March 2024 English

Submission to the Human Rights Committee in advance of the Committee’s development of the List of Issues Prior to Reporting for Canada’s 7th Periodic Review Canadian Human Rights Commission Submission …

Auditor General of Canada: Preparing Indigenous Offenders for Release, available at http://www.oag-bvg.gc


CCPA: Canadian Centre For Policy Alternatives · 27 March 2024 English

Land Acknowledgement The opinions and recommendations in this report, and any errors, are those of the author, The CCPA Manitoba publishes research on the and do not necessarily reflect the …

disadvantage is strongly as- sociated with crime. Offenders are more likely to be unemployed or employed in


CHRC: Canadian Human Rights Commission · 27 March 2024 English

Submission to the Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women in advance of the Committee’s development of the List of Issues Prior to Reporting for Canada’s 10th Periodic Review …

eng.htm. 8 “Statistics and research on women offenders.” The Correctional Service of Canada. Published ca/cnt/rpt/pdf/annrpt/annrpt20172018-eng.pdf female offenders conducted by the Office of the Correctional Investigator alternatives to incarceration for Indigenous offenders and respond to the underlying cause of offending confinement at more frequent rates than non- Indigenous offenders.11 Until recently, the Corrections and Conditional Auditor General of Canada: Preparing Indigenous Offenders for Release, available at http://www.oag-bvg.gc


CCSC: Centre for the Study of Co-operatives · 27 March 2024 English

With the current investment5 of $300,000 from the Government of Saskatchewan’s Ministry of Justice and Ministry of Immigration and Career Training during the study period, we found a return on …

recidivism (low/high) and the likelihood of non-offenders engaging in criminal behaviour (narrow/broad) recidivism (low/high) and the likelihood of non-offenders engaging in criminal behaviour (narrow/broad) for criminal offenders reduces the likelihood of recidivism, especially for older offenders (Uggen 2000) education, vocation, and work programs for adult offenders had lower recidivism rates than those who did employment and employability program to federal offenders throughout their sentence. 9 The program is administered


CHRC: Canadian Human Rights Commission · 27 March 2024 English

Submission to the Committee on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities in advance of the Committee’s development of the List of Issues Prior to Reporting for Canada’s 2nd Periodic Review …

of racially, ethnically and culturally diverse offenders. In the preceding ten (10) years, the Indigenous mental health conditions, and as a result, many offenders are incarcerated in settings that are ill-equipped staff and other offenders, and, often, self-harm. In too many instances, these offenders are placed in personal safety…In the correctional environment, offenders with mental disorders do not always comprehend providers that would allow for the placement of offenders in community psychiatric facilities.35 Recommended


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