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Journal Article

Citation

Trevena J, Poynton S. BOSCAR NSW Crime Just. Bull. 2016; (190): 1-11.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2016, State of New South Wales through the Department of Attorney General and Justice)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

AIM: To examine whether short prison sentences (up to 12 months) exert a deterrent effect for domestic-violence (DV) related offending.

Method: Propensity score matching was used to compare time to reoffence among 1,612 matched pairs of offenders, in which one of each pair received a prison sentence of 12 months or less and the other received a suspended sentence of two years or less. Kaplan-Meier survival analysis was then used to examine time to the first proven offence committed after the index court appearance.

Results: In the matched analysis, DV-related reoffending was not significantly different for people with suspended sentences and prison sentences. After 1 year, 20.3% of people given a suspended sentence and 20.3% of people given prison sentence had at least one new DV-related offence, and after 3 years the proportions were 34.2% and 32.3% respectively. These were not significantly different (HR 0.96, p=0.6).

Conclusion: Short prison sentences (up to 12 months) are no more effective in deterring DV-related reoffending than suspended sentences.

KEYWORDS: domestic violence, prison sentence, suspended sentence, reoffending, deterrence, propensity score matching


Language: en

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