27 results on '"Spiranovic, Caroline"'
Search Results
2. Juror and community views of the guilty plea sentencing discount: Findings from a national Australian study.
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Warner, Kate, Spiranovic, Caroline, Bartels, Lorana, Roberts, Lynne, and Gelb, Karen
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GUILTY pleas , *JURORS , *CUSTODIAL sentences , *CHILD sexual abuse , *PUBLIC opinion - Abstract
A plea of guilty is a long-accepted factor mitigating sentence in many countries, including Australia, although academic debate over the merits and application of the discount is ongoing. This paper presents findings from a national Australian study on public opinion on the guilty plea sentencing discount, with a particular focus on sexual offences. Survey data were drawn from 989 jurors in cases that resulted in a guilty verdict and 450 unempanelled jurors and 306 online respondents who were provided with vignettes based on real cases. A third of the respondents would have supported a discount in their case if the offender had pleaded guilty. In contrast, more than one half of the respondents surveyed, who had received a vignette with a guilty plea scenario, supported an increment in sentence if the offender had gone to trial. There was more support for a discount in cases involving non-sexual violent offences versus sexual offences and adult versus child victims. Where a discount was supported, this most commonly was a reduction in the length of custodial sentence, with online respondents allocating the least generous discounts. Willingness to accept a sentencing discount was predicted by a range of variables including gender, education, punitive attitudes, offence type and offence seriousness. We conclude by considering the implications of our findings for sentencing law and practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Why internet users' perceptions of viewing child exploitation material matter for prevention policies.
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Hunn, Charlotte, Spiranovic, Caroline, Prichard, Jeremy, and Gelb, Karen
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CHILD abuse , *CRIME prevention , *INTERNET users - Abstract
There are claims that the societal appetite for 'child exploitation material' is increasing. Yet, Australia's policy response does not include initiatives to dissuade potential offenders from deliberately viewing child exploitation material for the first time (onset). To critically examine this issue, this paper draws on Situational Crime Prevention theory. It argues that (a) many first-time child exploitation material viewers fit the Situational Crime Prevention construct of the Opportunistic Offender and (b) suggests that current policy overlooks the kinds of non-instrumental factors that increase the risk of onset for this group, including doubts about the criminality and harmfulness of viewing child exploitation material. The paper then empirically examines social attitudes to child exploitation material viewing by presenting the findings of a survey of 504 Australian internet users. Results indicate that a sizeable minority of the participants were: unaware that it is a crime to view certain types of child exploitation material in Australia; and held doubts about the harmfulness of viewing child exploitation material. These findings are used to reflect on how the presence of these non-instrumental factors among ordinary internet users may affect the offending readiness of the Opportunistic Offender. Policy implications are then briefly discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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- View/download PDF
4. Increasing knowledge of mental illness through secondary research of electronic health records: opportunities and challenges.
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Spiranovic, Caroline, Matthews, Allison, Scanlan, Joel, and Kirkby, Kenneth C.
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MENTAL illness , *ELECTRONIC health records , *ETIOLOGY of diseases , *DISEASE prevalence ,PSYCHIATRIC research - Abstract
Aim/Purpose: The primary use of electronic health records (EHRs) is in the care of the individual patient. Secondary research uses employ information in EHRs for purposes beyond that of care of the individual. Secondary research uses may broadly be divided into studies which focus on improving care and treatment of individuals and those which aim to increase knowledge about disease causes, associations and prevalence at a population level. This paper provides a review of studies that have used EHRs to increase knowledge at a population level. It examines the methods used, types of research conducted, difficulties and challenges faced and implications for future research and mental health research in particular. Method: A review was undertaken based on a search for peer-reviewed and recently (i.e. since 2005) published articles with full-text available online. Findings/Results: The studies which have used EHRs to increase knowledge have predominantly involved; (1) data mining to identify biomarkers and gene–disease associations, (2) epidemiological research using linked/merged health records and (3) surveillance, prediction and alerts for diseases/illnesses. The principal methodological challenges identified were data quality, discrepancies/inconsistencies in data and interoperability of EHRs. Conclusions: Despite the challenges faced in secondary usage of EHRs, significant research has been undertaken and researchers have proposed and tested various approaches to address methodological issues. The study methods employed in other fields of medical research can be extrapolated to study issues of significance to mental health using EHRs. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
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- 2016
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5. Tertiary Education Students' Attitudes to the Harmfulness of Viewing and Distributing Child Pornography.
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Prichard, Jeremy, Spiranovic, Caroline, Gelb, Karen, Watters, Paul A., and Krone, Tony
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CHILD pornography , *PORNOGRAPHY laws , *PUBLIC support , *SOCIAL attitudes , *UNDERGRADUATES , *ATTITUDE (Psychology) - Abstract
Little research has examined public support for criminalising viewing and distributing child exploitation material (CEM). Using an online survey of 431 undergraduate students from Australia, we explored perceptions of the harmfulness of CEM. The majority of respondents agreed that viewing and distributing CEM lead to further production and had a negative effect on victims. Although 93% of respondents agreed that CEM involving real child victims should be illegal, 22% did not agree that CEM involving pseudoimages should be illegal. Those who demonstrated higher levels of agreement with explanations of the harmfulness of CEM were more likely to be female, to have achieved postsecondary qualifications, to have never viewed pornography, to support censorship of pornography, and to believe that CEM involving pseudoimages of children should be illegal. The implications of these findings are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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6. Personally controlled electronic health records in Australia: Challenges in communication of mental health information.
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Spiranovic, Caroline, Matthews, Allison, Scanlan, Joel, and Kirkby, Kenneth C
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MENTAL health education , *ELECTRONIC health records , *HEALTH literacy , *HEALTH education , *COMMUNICATION , *PATIENT education - Abstract
The purpose of this paper was to explore the implications of mental health literacy for uptake, use and benefits of Australia's Personally Controlled Electronic Health Record (PCEHR). A narrative review was undertaken using literature gained through university search engines, Google Scholar, and government and other reputable websites. Documents retrieved were predominantly recent (i.e., since 2005) and Australian-based. Key findings were that low levels of mental health literacy can adversely affect: Interpretations of health-related information, help-seeking behaviours, use of health services, and peer support for those living with mental illness. Consumers with low levels of mental health literacy, as observed in many disadvantaged groups in Australia, may benefit from additional support in order to use and derive the benefits envisaged for the PCEHR. It was concluded that low levels of mental health literacy may limit the uptake, use and benefits of Australia's PCEHR. A number of possible strategies to assist consumers with low mental health literacy were discussed. It was noted that targeted approaches to addressing mental health literacy in disadvantaged groups are warranted to minimise disparity in health care access and long-term health outcomes. It was also suggested that healthcare providers could play an important role in encouraging uptake of the PCEHR by placing greater emphasis on patient education and support. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
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7. Jurors’ views of suspended sentences.
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Warner, Kate and Spiranovic, Caroline
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JURORS , *PROBATION , *CRIMINALS , *LEGAL judgments , *CRIMINAL procedure , *VIOLENT crimes - Abstract
This article examines jurors’ views on sentencing from trials returning guilty verdicts where the offender has been sentenced to a wholly suspended sentence or where jurors have suggested a wholly suspended sentence as the most appropriate sentencing outcome. It challenges the poor public image of suspended sentences and provides further evidence that informed judgement on sentencing issues reveals a public that is not as punitive as is commonly portrayed. However, rather than claiming that the findings support the intrinsic worth of wholly suspended sentences, it is suggested that they indicate a desire to avoid immediate prison sentences in many cases. In other words it shows there is considerable support for non-custodial options in the kinds of cases that attract wholly suspended sentences, even in the case of some crimes of violence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
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8. Young people, child pornography, and subcultural norms on the Internet.
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Prichard, Jeremy, Spiranovic, Caroline, Watters, Paul, and Lueg, Christopher
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CHILD sexual abuse , *CULTURE , *INTERNET , *PORNOGRAPHY , *SEX offenders , *SOCIAL media - Abstract
Literature to date has treated as distinct two issues (a) the influence of pornography on young people and (b) the growth of Internet child pornography, also called child exploitation material ( CEM). This article discusses how young people might interact with, and be affected by, CEM. The article first considers the effect of CEM on young victims abused to generate the material. It then explains the paucity of data regarding the prevalence with which young people view CEM online, inadvertently or deliberately. New analyses are presented from a 2010 study of search terms entered on an internationally popular peer-to-peer website, isoHunt. Over 91 days, 162 persistent search terms were recorded. Most of these related to file sharing of popular movies, music, and so forth. Thirty-six search terms were categorized as specific to a youth market and perhaps a child market. Additionally, 4 deviant, and persistent search terms were found, 3 relating to CEM and the fourth to bestiality. The article discusses whether the existence of CEM on a mainstream website, combined with online subcultural influences, may normalize the material for some youth and increase the risk of onset (first deliberate viewing). Among other things, the article proposes that future research examines the relationship between onset and sex offending by youth. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2013
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9. Public preferences for sentencing purposes: What difference does offender age, criminal history and offence type make?
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Spiranovic, Caroline A., Roberts, Lynne D., Indermaur, David, Warner, Kate, Gelb, Karen, and Mackenzie, Geraldine
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PUBLIC opinion , *CRIMINAL sentencing , *CRIMINALS , *CRIMINAL records , *UTILITARIANISM - Abstract
Preferences of 800 randomly selected Australians for retributive and utilitarian sentencing purposes were examined in response to brief crime scenarios where offender age, offence type and offender history were systematically varied. Respondents selected rehabilitation as the most important purpose for first-time, young and burglary offenders. Punishment was endorsed as most important for repeat, adult and serious assault offenders. Multinomial logistic regression analysis revealed that offence history was a stronger predictor of public preferences than offender age or offence type; the odds of choosing rehabilitation compared with punishment were significantly increased by a factor of 6.1 for cases involving first-time offenders. It appears that when given specific cases to consider, the public takes an approach akin to that taken by the sentencing courts as they weigh up the importance of the various purposes for the case at hand. Public preferences are thus broadly consistent with current law and sentencing practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2012
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10. Sentencing and public confidence: Results from a national Australian survey on public opinions towards sentencing.
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Mackenzie, Geraldine, Spiranovic, Caroline, Warner, Kate, Stobbs, Nigel, Gelb, Karen, Indermaur, David, Roberts, Lynne, Broadhurst, Rod, and Bouhours, Thierry
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CRIMINAL sentencing , *PUBLIC support , *LENIENCY (Law) , *PUBLIC opinion , *TELEPHONE surveys , *IMPRISONMENT , *CRIME - Abstract
This paper examines the critical issue of public confidence in sentencing, and presents findings from Phase I of an Australia-wide sentencing and public confidence project. Phase I comprised a nationally representative telephone survey of 6005 participants. The majority of respondents expressed high levels of punitiveness and were dissatisfied with sentences imposed by the courts. Despite this, many were strongly supportive of the use of alternatives to imprisonment for a range of offences. These nuanced views raise questions regarding the efficacy of gauging public opinion using opinion poll style questions; indeed the expected outcome from this first phase of the four phase sentencing and public confidence project. The following phases of this project, reported on elsewhere, examined the effects of various interventions on the robustness and nature of these views initially expressed in a standard ‘top of the head’ opinion poll. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2012
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11. A country not divided: A comparison of public punitiveness and confidence in sentencing across Australia.
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Roberts, Lynne D, Spiranovic, Caroline, and Indermaur, David
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LEGISLATION , *PUBLIC opinion , *CRIMINAL sentencing , *TELEPHONE surveys , *JURISDICTION , *IMPRISONMENT rates , *AUSTRALIAN states - Abstract
Changes to sentencing legislation are often introduced or justified on the basis of satisfying public opinion. If sentencing policy is a reflection of public opinion we should see a concordance between different sentencing policies and public opinion. This paper provides a comparison between Australian States and Territories in terms of two key measures of public attitude concerning sentencing: confidence in sentencing and punitiveness. These results are based on acomprehensive telephone survey (N = 6005) of Australian adults which utilized a stratified random sample of households from the Electronic White Pages. It was found that there were only minor differences in the key measures of public attitude despite the notable differences between the States and Territories of Australia with respect to sentencing policy. Differences in public attitudes across jurisdictions were small, accounting for less than 2 per cent of variation in confidence in sentencing and punitive attitudes scores. In addition, despite the predicted moderately negative association between confidence in sentencing and punitiveness, neither of these variables was related in any systematic way to jurisdictional differences in imprisonment rates. The major implication of these findings is that the wide differences in sentencing practice and policy between jurisdictions in Australia are not linked to differences in public attitudes, supporting Beckett's (1997) argument that sentencing policy is better understood as a function of political initiative rather than a direct articulation of public attitude. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
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12. yshareit.
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Spiranovic, Caroline, Briggs, Kate, Mobsby, Kenneth, and Daniels, Brett
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MENTAL health , *MENTAL health services , *HEALTH services administration , *MEDICAL record access control , *WEB archives , *WEBSITES - Abstract
The yshareit project aims to increase awareness of and access to reputable e-mental health resources ampng young people. Small group workshops were conducted using a triage website to explore youth-relevant e-mental health websites. Participants completed a range of activities aimed at enhancing communication skills and developing ideas for promoting e-mental health resources. The results revealed a significant increase in awareness, usage and promotion to others of e-mental health websites. They indicate that small-group workshops are an effective means of educating young people about reputable e-mental health resources, and that an associated triage website is a useful adjunct for promoting these resources. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
13. The predictive validity of risk assessment tools used in Australia for female offenders: A systematic review.
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Gower, Menna, Spiranovic, Caroline, Morgan, Frank, and Saunders, Julie
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RISK of violence , *ABORIGINAL Australians , *CRIMINALS , *GREY literature , *MEDICAL information storage & retrieval systems , *PSYCHOLOGY information storage & retrieval systems , *MEDLINE , *RISK assessment , *WOMEN , *SYSTEMATIC reviews , *PREDICTIVE validity - Abstract
Assessing an offender's level of risk is a vital step in the determination of treatment services; however, risk assessment tools have been consistently developed using a male cohort. Geraghty and Woodham (2015) conducted a review to determine the validity of risk assessment tools for females and found the Level of Service Inventory (LSI) to be the most valid. The LSI has been further developed and additional risk assessment tools have been included in the suite of assessments across various international jurisdictions; therefore, an updated review is necessary to encompass subsequent research. The current review is an international investigation into the relevance of risk assessment tools for females; however, Australia has not carried out extensive research in this area, particularly Western Australia which has an overrepresentation of Aboriginal offenders. As such, the focus was on studies that included risk assessment tools used in Australia including the Level of Service/Risk, Need, Responsivity (LS/RNR), the Violence Risk Scale (VRS), the Psychopathy Checklist (PCL-R) and the Historic, Clinical and Risk 20 (HCR-20). Five databases were searched and included OVID Embase, OVID Medline, OVID PsycInfo, OVID full text and PsycARTICLES and elicited 610 studies with a further three sourced from gray literature. The articles were assessed based on pre-determined criteria which resulted in 18 studies reviewed in detail. It was identified that all four risk assessment tools were valid for use with female offenders; however, this was not consistent with the findings from a single Australian study, likely due to the combination of a small sample and low base rates of reoffending. Further research is needed on gender comparisons to consider potential gender differences in factors and items that form the risk assessment tools so that treatment and risk management pans may be optimised for female offenders. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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14. The impact of chemical trace evidence on justice outcomes: Exploring the additive value of forensic science disciplines.
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Woodman, Peter A., Spiranovic, Caroline, Julian, Roberta, Ballantyne, Kaye N., and Kelty, Sally F.
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FORENSIC sciences , *CRIMINAL investigation , *CRIME scenes , *BALLISTICS , *CRIMINAL justice system - Abstract
The focus of this research was to examine the contribution chemical trace evidence makes to criminal justice outcomes. The aim of this work was to place the discipline of chemical trace evidence under the spotlight as there is a dearth of robust research on the impact of this discipline. In this study, data relating to the forensic examinations in a sample of 238 cases which included chemical trace evidence, was collated with data from police investigations and court processes. The findings show that chemical trace evidence is frequently used in combination with other forensic disciplines to support the progress of high-level criminal cases through the justice system. Due to characteristics of how the criminal cases in the dataset were investigated and prosecuted, in combination with the methodology applied in this study, the impact of forensic evidence on the decision to charge suspects could not be analysed quantitatively. However, the impact of forensic evidence on court outcomes in the sample of cases was analysed using methodology that considered the results of the examinations, and the ability of the evidence to provide support for the inclusion or exclusion of persons of interest. The possibility of chemical trace evidence having impact when applied in combination with other forensic disciplines was also examined. It was found that biological examination results was a significant standalone predictor of court outcomes. In contrast, chemical trace examinations did not predict court outcomes when considered as a standalone predictor but examination results of chemical trace evidence in combination with ballistics/tool marks was significantly associated with court outcomes. The findings of this research indicate that, to assess the full impact of any discipline of forensic evidence on the criminal justice system, the analysis must take into account the potential for important synergies that may exist with other forensic and non-forensic evidence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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15. What does the public think about sex offender registers? Findings from a national Australian study.
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Bartels, Lorana, Gelb, Karen, Spiranovic, Caroline, Warner, Kate, Roberts, Lynne, and Davis, Julia
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SEX offenders , *SEX offender registration , *PUBLIC support , *PUBLIC opinion , *JUDICIAL discretion - Abstract
This article presents data from questions about sex offender registration orders in a large national survey on Australian public opinion about adult sex offenders. It outlines the legislative frameworks that govern these registers in Australia and discusses the use of public registers, the research on the effectiveness of sex offender registers, and Australian attitudes to such registers. Our surveys of three cohorts of members of the Australian public reveal strong public support for sex offender registers, especially for cases involving child victims. However, there was also support for judicial discretion in the imposition of orders and reduced support for automatic registration where a non-custodial sentence is imposed. The Australian Government has recently announced the establishment of a national public sex offender register, but our findings show limited support for this approach. The implications for policy and practice are considered. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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16. Why sentence? Comparing the views of jurors, judges and the legislature on the purposes of sentencing in Victoria, Australia.
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Warner, Kate, Davis, Julia, Spiranovic, Caroline, Cockburn, Helen, and Freiberg, Arie
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CRIMINAL sentencing , *JURORS , *LEGISLATIVE bodies - Abstract
In recent times, parliaments have introduced legislation directing judges to take defined purposes into account when sentencing. At the same time, judges and politicians also acknowledge that sentencing should vindicate the values of the community. This article compares the views on the purposes of sentencing of three major participants in the criminal justice system: legislators who pass sentencing statutes, judges who impose and justify sentences and jurors who represent the community. A total of 987 Australian jurors in the Victorian Jury Sentencing Study (2013–2015) were asked to sentence the offender in their trial and to choose the purpose that best justified the sentence. The judges' sentencing remarks were coded and the results were compared with the jurors' surveys. The research shows that, in this jurisdiction, the views of the judges, the jurors and the legislators are not always well aligned. Judges relied on general deterrence much more than jurors and jurors selected incapacitation as the primary purpose in only about a fifth of 'serious offender' cases where parliament has provided that community protection must be the principal purpose. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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17. Exploring the educative role of judges' sentencing remarks: an analysis of remarks on child exploitation material.
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Hunn, Charlotte M., Cockburn, Helen, Spiranovic, Caroline, and Prichard, Jeremy
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CRIME prevention , *SEX crimes , *JUDGES , *CHILDREN , *CONTENT analysis - Abstract
The online viewing of child exploitation material (CEM) is a seemingly intractable problem. Evidence suggests that CEM is viewed not only by the paedophilic 'other', but by people without prior offending histories or pre-existing sexual interests in children. Studies emphasise the role of offence-supportive attitudes in enabling first-time offending. Relatedly, nascent research indicates that some sections of the Australian community express ambivalence about the harms involved in viewing such material. Taking a crime prevention perspective, this article considers the need and value of tackling such attitudes and the educative role that judges' sentencing comments may play. In doing so, this article presents a content analysis of judicial comments from Victoria and Tasmania. Encouragingly, results show that judges provide some explanation of the harms involved in most instances. Yet, some of the explanations that judges give may be perpetuating, rather than reducing, ambiguity about the wrongfulness of 'just' viewing CEM online. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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18. Measuring jurors’ views on sentencing: Results from the second Australian jury sentencing study.
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Warner, Kate, Davis, Julia, Spiranovic, Caroline, Cockburn, Helen, and Freiberg, Arie
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CRIMINAL sentencing , *CRIMINAL judgments , *CRIMINAL procedure , *JURY decision making , *LEGAL status of jurors - Abstract
This paper presents the results of the Victorian Jury Sentencing Study which aimed to measure jurors’ views on sentencing. The study asked jurors who had returned a guilty verdict to propose a sentence for the offender, to comment on the sentence given by the judge in their case and to give their opinions on general sentencing levels for different offence types. A total of 987 jurors from 124 criminal trials in the County Court of Victoria participated in this mixed-method and multi-phased study in 2013–2015. The results are based on juror responses to the Stage One and Stage Two surveys and show that the views of judges and jurors are much more closely aligned than mass public opinion surveys would suggest. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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19. The effect of therapeutic and deterrent messages on Internet users attempting to access 'barely legal' pornography.
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Prichard, Jeremy, Wortley, Richard, Watters, Paul, Spiranovic, Caroline, and Scanlan, Joel
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CHILD pornography , *CRIME prevention , *ODDS ratio , *EXPERIMENTAL groups , *INTERNET users - Abstract
Online child sexual abuse material (CSAM) is a growing problem. Prevention charities, such as Stop It Now! UK, use online messaging to dissuade users from viewing CSAM and to encourage them to consider anonymous therapeutic interventions. This experiment used a honeypot website that purported to contain barely legal pornography, which we treated as a proxy for CSAM. We examined whether warnings would dissuade males (18–30 years) from visiting the website. Participants (n = 474) who attempted to access the site were randomly allocated to one of four conditions. The control group went straight to the landing page (control; n = 100). The experimental groups encountered different warning messages: deterrence-themed with an image (D3; n = 117); therapeutic-themed (T1; n = 120); and therapeutic-themed with an image (T3; n = 137). We measured the click through to the site. Three quarters of the control group attempted to enter the pornography site, compared with 35 % to 47 % of the experimental groups. All messages were effective: D3 (odds ratio [OR] = 5.02), T1 (OR = 4.06) and T2 (OR = 3.05). Images did not enhance warning effectiveness. We argue that therapeutic and deterrent warnings are useful for CSAM-prevention. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Fear of Cyber-Identity Theft and Related Fraudulent Activity.
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Roberts, LynneD., Indermaur, David, and Spiranovic, Caroline
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COMPUTER crimes , *IDENTITY theft , *INTERNET fraud , *SOCIAL attitudes , *ELECTRONIC commerce research - Abstract
Identity theft and related fraudulent activities affect approximately one in twenty-five adults each year across western societies. The Internet provides a new avenue for obtaining identity tokens and identifying information and increases the scale on which identity theft can be perpetrated. Recent research has suggested that fear of these types of crimes now matches or exceeds the fear of traditional place-based crimes, and has the potential to curtail online activities and hinder the further development of e-commerce applications. In this article, we conduct exploratory research identifying predictors of fear of cyber-identity theft and related fraudulent activities, based on the analysis of items included in the Australian Survey of Social Attitudes (2007). Fear was predicted by a generalized fear of crime component and a specific Internet exposure component. Traditional predictors of fear of crime were insignificant or weak predictors, highlighting the need for further research. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2013
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21. A matter of judgement: The effect of information and deliberation on public attitudes to punishment.
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Indermaur, David, Roberts, Lynne, Spiranovic, Caroline, Mackenzie, Geraldine, and Gelb, Karen
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SOCIAL attitudes , *PUNISHMENT , *CRIMINAL justice system , *ALTERNATIVES to imprisonment , *REHABILITATION of criminals - Abstract
The idea of reducing public punitiveness through providing information and encouraging deliberation has attracted considerable interest. However, there remains no solid evidence of durable changes in attitude. The study presented here provides a test of the hypothesis that information combined with deliberation can affect general measures of punitiveness, confidence in the courts and acceptance of alternatives to imprisonment (the three dependent variables). The study involved a pre-test, post-test experimental design. Participants were randomly allocated to either an intervention group or a control condition. Statistically significant changes in the dependent variables were observed immediately following the intervention but these changes were not sustained when measured at follow-up nine months later. Further, at the time of the follow-up the differences between the control group scores and the intervention group scores were not significantly different. The observed changes immediately following the intervention are seen to be a function of the changed relationship of the respondent to the task. The implications of the results for integrating public perspectives into policy are discussed. It is argued that rather than a focus on public education, a more productive direction is to focus on the way the public is engaged on matters concerning punishment. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2012
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22. Internet subcultures and pathways to the use of child pornography.
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Prichard, Jeremy, Watters, Paul A., and Spiranovic, Caroline
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INTERNET , *CHILD pornography laws , *LEGISLATORS , *LAW enforcement agencies , *CHILD sexual abuse , *PEER-to-peer architecture (Computer networks) , *JUSTICE administration - Abstract
With ∼ontinual advances in Internet capability the child pornography market is experiencing a boom in demand and supply. Attempts to reduce the market challenge legislators, law enforcement agencies, practitioners and researchers alike - due in large part to the decentralised and global nature of the Internet. Much research has focused on frequent users of child pornography and whether such behaviour is interrelated with child sexual assaults. This article instead draws attention to onset, the first deliberate viewing of child pornography. It presents the results of a three-month study of a global Peer-to -Peer network, isoHunt. Analysis of the site's Top 300 search terms indicated that child pornography is consistently shared. Risk factors for onset are discussed, including the potential normalisation of child pornography among Internet subcultures. Strategies are discussed to encourage subcultures to inhibit child pornography use and to increase understanding of the harms associated with such material. Implications for legal systems, policy and research are explored. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
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23. Forensic Experts' Perspectives on Australian Indigenous Sexual Offenders and Factors Important in Evaluating the Risk of Recidivism.
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Allan, Alfred, Parry, Cate L., Tubex, Hilde, Spiranovic, Caroline, and Morgan, Frank
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SEX offenders , *INDIGENOUS Australians , *RECIDIVISM , *RISK perception , *RISK assessment , *EVALUATORS , *EXPERTISE , *RESEARCH , *RESEARCH methodology , *CRIMINALS , *MEDICAL cooperation , *EVALUATION research , *COMPARATIVE studies , *SEX crimes - Abstract
Law and ethics require that risk assessment should be cross-culturally valid and fair, but Australian research in this regard is underdeveloped. A logical first step in progressing the work required to build a strong evidence base on culturally sensitive risk assessment in Australia is to determine the expert views of those in the field. We interviewed 13 Australian evaluators who assess Indigenous sexual offenders' recidivism risk to determine their perceptions of the risk assessment instruments they use and the attributes they believe evaluators doing cross-cultural assessments should have. Our central findings are that evaluators use the available instruments because they believe that the same factors predict sexual recidivism for Indigenous and non-Indigenous offenders, but that they do so cautiously knowing the limitations of the instruments. Evaluators nevertheless want more research data to guide them when they use the available instruments to assess people from cultures that differ from those of people in the normative sample. Participants acknowledge that the unique challenges of assessing Indigenous sexual offenders require non-Indigenous evaluators to be culturally competent and confident. These findings should be valuable to evaluators and those who train or supervise evaluators and/or intend to establish or improve the validity of risk instruments in Australia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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24. To trace or not to trace: A survey of how police use and perceive chemical trace evidence.
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Woodman, Peter A., Julian, Roberta, Spiranovic, Caroline, and Ballantyne, Kaye N.
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CRIMINAL investigation , *CRIMINAL evidence , *FORENSIC sciences , *CRIMINAL justice system , *CRIME laboratories , *PROFESSIONAL practice , *CRIME , *POLICE - Abstract
There is limited information available about the impact of chemical trace evidence and it has tended to be anecdotal and mostly pertaining to court outcomes. Very little is known about the use of chemical trace evidence by police investigators or the impact that this evidence form has on criminal investigations. This survey, which was conducted in Victoria, Australia, was aimed at addressing these inadequacies by capturing information from police investigators about: (i) the purpose of using chemical trace and other forensic services; (ii) the expectation of what value forensic services would provide; (iii) the actual impact of forensic evidence in specified cases; and (iv) the general perceptions of forensic science. Police officers who were the lead investigators in a sample of criminal investigations were selected as the subjects for this survey. Each of the sample cases included chemical trace evidence and many of the cases also included other forms of forensic evidence. The police investigators indicated that they use chemical trace evidence with the expectation that it will assist decision-making in their investigations and contribute to building a case for court. Survey responses indicated that chemical trace evidence can impact on multiple stages of a case and that this form of evidence can play a part in guiding police investigators in making decisions about how their cases progress through the criminal justice system. It was found that an important aspect of the impact of chemical trace evidence can involve connections with other forensic and non-forensic evidence in the cases. The provision of preliminary results, prior to the formal written reports that are issued for use in court, enables chemical trace evidence to contribute timely support to investigations. The findings of this survey study contradict prevailing perceptions that the contribution of chemical trace evidence is limited to the presentation of evidence in court. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Assessing the Risk of Australian Indigenous Sexual Offenders Reoffending: A Review of the Research Literature and Court Decisions.
- Author
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Allan, Alfred, Parry, Catherine L., Ferrante, Anna, Gillies, Christine, Griffiths, Catherine S., Morgan, Francis, Spiranovic, Caroline, Smallbone, Stephen, Tubex, Hilde, and Wong, Stephen C. P.
- Subjects
- *
SEX offenders , *INDIGENOUS Australians , *LEGAL judgments , *LITERATURE reviews , *HEALTH practitioners - Abstract
The assessment of offenders' risk of reoffending, particularly sexual reoffending, is a core activity of forensic mental health practitioners. The purpose of these assessments is to reduce the risk of harm to the public, but they are controversial and become more contentious when Australian practitioners who want to undertake such assessments in an ethically responsible way must use reliable validated instruments, disclose the limitations of their assessment methods, instruments and data to judicial decision-makers and understand how decision-makers might use their reports. The purpose of this systematic literature review was to explore the practices of Australian practitioners and courts in respect of the assessment of Australian Indigenous male sexual offenders' risk of reoffending. We could not identify an instrument that has been developed for the assessment of this population group. Australian courts differ in whether they admit and give weight to practitioners' evidence and opinions based on data obtained with non-validated instruments. We could only identify three possible predictor variables with enough quantitative support to justify including them in an instrument that could be used to assess Indigenous sexual offenders. There is a need for research regarding the validity of the instruments that practitioners use. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Evaluation of an online youth ambassador program to promote mental health.
- Author
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Beamish, Nicola, Cannan, Philippa, Fujiyama, Hakuei, Matthews, Allison, Spiranovic, Caroline, Briggs, Kate, Kirkby, Kenneth, Mobsby, Caroline, and Daniels, Brett
- Subjects
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MENTAL health services for teenagers , *MENTAL health , *INTERNET , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *COMPUTER network resources - Abstract
To evaluate an online Youth Ambassador (VA) program designed to promote internet resources for mental health in an adolescent population, 56 YAs and 357 of their Year 10 peers from 11 Tasmanian schools completed e-mental health questionnaires before and after the YAs attended a single workshop session. The workshops, which were delivered in the high school setting, were either facilitated or self-directed. Self-reported awareness of e-mental health resources increased among both YAs and their peers. The peer group also showed increased frequency of recommending help-seeking to others. There were no differences in outcomes for facilitated or self-directed workshop formats. The results suggest that an online VA program delivered in school is useful in improving mental health awareness for workshop participants. While their Year 10 peer groups also showed increased awareness, this could not necessarily be attributed to the participation of all 11 schools in the VA program. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
27. Gaming Tasks as a Method for Studying the Impact of Warning Messages on Information Behavior.
- Author
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Haddad, Alexandra, Sauer, James, Prichard, Jeremy, Spiranovic, Caroline, and Gelb, Karen
- Subjects
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INFORMATION-seeking behavior , *MOTOR imagery (Cognition) , *TASKS , *COMPUTER crimes - Abstract
New and nontraditional approaches are required to effectively tackle the global problem of cybercrime. Online warning messages offer the unique potential to influence information behavior at the exact point of user decision-making. This research assessed the prevention effect of differing components of warning messages. Thirty-five male participants, aged 18–43, participated in a behavioral-compliance task comprising messages received when visiting websites likely to contain malware. Participants also rated messages on believability, severity, and effects on intention to comply. The components of messages tested were as follows: three "signal words" (warning, hazard, and stop), two levels of message explicitness (high, low), and two imagery conditions (eyes, no eyes). Contrary to expectations, explicitness was the only message component to yield a significant preventative effect on self-rated and behavioral responses. Participants not only perceived the explicit messages as more believable, severe, and likely to increase intention to comply but also demonstrated, through their behavioral-compliance data, a preventative effect from more explicit messages. The implications of these findings for designing messages to prevent cybercrimes are explored. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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