4533.0 - Directory of Family and Domestic Violence Statistics, 2013  
ARCHIVED ISSUE Released at 11:30 AM (CANBERRA TIME) 03/10/2013   
   Page tools: Print Print Page Print all pages in this productPrint All

On this page:
Contact details
Purpose
Description
Definition of family and domestic violence
Relationship to Defining the data challenge for family, domestic and sexual violence (cat. no. 4529.0)
Family and domestic violence related content (data items collected)
Collection methodology
Scope / Target population
Coverage
Data availability / Dissemination
Publications
Collection history
Other directory data sources held by this agency

JUSTICELINK, NEW SOUTH WALES

DASHBOARD METADATA

Collection typeGeographic coverageFrequencyData availability
  • Administrative by-product
  • New South Wales
  • LGA
  • Annual
  • Detailed publication / report publicly available
  • Customised data - free upon request 1
  • Customised data - charged consultancy 1
[1] May be subject to release conditions - see BOCSAR Information Service Policy

DETAILED METADATA

Contact details

Data custodianNew South Wales Bureau of Crime Statistics and Research (BOCSAR)
Contact Deputy Director
AddressGPO Box 6, SYDNEY, NSW 2001
Telephone02 9231 9190
Facsimile 02 9231 9187
Emailbcsr@agd.nsw.gov.au
Internethttp://www.bocsar.nsw.gov.au
Source linkhttp://www.bocsar.nsw.gov.au/bocsar/bocsar_court_stats.html,c=y
PURPOSE

To record information about people appearing before New South Wales criminal courts.

DESCRIPTION

Justicelink is an electronic system which links all New South Wales courts onto the one computer system. Unit record data from this system is provided to BOCSAR for the compilation of statistics.

DEFINITION OF FAMILY AND DOMESTIC VIOLENCE

Family and domestic violence is defined in accordance with the Crimes (Domestic and Personal Violence) Act 2007. This Act creates a specific “domestic violence offence” which is defined as “a personal violence offence committed by a person against another person with whom the person who commits the offence has or has had a domestic relationship.”

A person is deemed to have a domestic relationship with another person under this Act if the person: (a) is or has been married to the other person, or
(b) is or has been a de facto partner of that other person, or
(c) has or has had an intimate personal relationship with the other person, whether or not the intimate relationship involves or has involved a relationship of a sexual nature, or
(d) is living or has lived in the same household as the other person, or
(e) is living or has lived as a long-term resident in the same residential facility as the other person and at the same time as the other person (not being a facility that is a correctional centre within the meaning of the Crimes (Administration of Sentences) Act 1999 or a detention centre within the meaning of the Children (Detention Centres) Act 1987, or
(f) has or has had a relationship involving his or her dependence on the ongoing paid or unpaid care of the other person, or
(g) is or has been a relative of the other person, or
(h) in the case of an Aboriginal person or a Torres Strait Islander, is or has been part of the extended family or kin of the other person according to the Indigenous kinship system of the person’s culture.

Personal violence offences are defined as:

(a) an offence under, or mentioned in, section 19A, 24, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31, 33, 33A, 35, 35A, 37, 38, 39, 41, 44, 46, 47, 48, 49, 58, 59, 61, 61B, 61C, 61D, 61E, 61I, 61J, 61JA, 61K, 61L, 61M, 61N, 61O, 65A, 66A, 66B, 66C, 66D, 66EA, 80A, 80D, 86, 87, 93G, 93GA, 195, 196, 198, 199, 200, 562I … or 562ZG of the Crimes Act 1900, or

(b) an offence under section 13 or 14 of this Act [stalking / intimidation or contravene apprehended violence order], or

(c) an offence of attempting to commit an offence referred to in paragraph (a) or (b).

Separate law part codes have been created to capture this range of new domestic violence offences. Using separate law part codes for each of the domestic violence offences will allow for these offences to be recorded on offender’s criminal records and also will allow for them to be separately identified in future court statistics.

Aspects of family and domestic violence captured included are:
  • physical abuse;
  • sexual abuse;
  • psychological abuse;
  • harassment and stalking;
  • economic abuse;
  • social abuse;
  • verbal abuse; and
  • property damage.

RELATIONSHIP TO DEFINING THE DATA CHALLENGE FOR FAMILY, DOMESTIC AND SEXUAL VIOLENCE (cat. no. 4529.0)

The summary table below is designed to indicate the amount of information available for each of the six elements outlined in Defining the Data Challenge for Family, Domestic and Sexual Violence, 2013 (cat. no. 4529.0). This is a subjective assessment made by the ABS about the data collected and is not an indication of data quality.

Conceptual Framework
Amount of Information Available
Element/Sub–element
Some
Detailed
Context
Environmental factors
Psycho-social factors
Risk
Community prevalence
Community incidence
Incident/event
Responses
Formal responses
Informal responses
Impacts/Outcomes
Programs, Research & Evaluation
FAMILY AND DOMESTIC VIOLENCE RELATED CONTENT (data items collected)

The following tables provide a detailed analysis of the availability of specified data elements in the data source. The data items have been grouped into four counting units:
1. Context;
2. Person;
3. Incident/Event; and
4. Transaction.

Tables are absent from the entry in cases where the data source contains no data items which relate to the particular counting unit/s.

Context

Please note: This data source does not contain any data items relevant to this counting unit. Person

Data Items
Victim
Perpetrator
Secondary
Residential location
Age
Sex
Indigenous status
Disability status
Country of birth
Language spoken
Employment status
Education
Income
Socio-economic status
Mental illness
Other
Incident/event

Data Items
Available
Location of incident/event
Residential location
Workplace
Educational institution
Public Place
Other Location
Relationship between parties
Current partner
Previous partner
Boyfriend/girlfriend/date
Parent
Child
Sibling
Other relatives
Other member of household
Personal/financial dependency
Other
Other Characteristics
Weapon used
Type of weapon
Physical injury sustained
Type of injury sustained
Pregnancy
Alcohol/substance use
Prior history of victimisation/offending
Change to routine
Time off work/economic costs
Perceptions of behaviour as criminal
Other
Transaction

Data Items
Available
Detection
Reported to police
Reasons not reported to police
Satisfaction with police response
Application for violence order
Violence order issued
Offender charged
Offender went to court
Offender sentence type
Child protection involvement
Other (Duration of penalty/offence)
Formal support
Services used/referral to services
Medical treatment/type
Counselling
Legal
Financial
Housing/accommodation
Crisis
Other
Informal Support
Family/friends
Minister/priest
Telephone service
Other
COLLECTION METHODOLOGY

Prior to the implementation of Justicelink, data were either entered into the General Local Court (GLC) system or BOCSAR staff manually recorded details directly from the Court Attendance Notice (for non-GLC courts). Court staff and Judges Associates are now responsible for entering results, with BOCSAR validating and auditing the data.

The counting unit is the number of persons in finalised cases. Each person record now includes all charges that the person had finalised on the same date (regardless of whether or not they were registered on the same date). A person with charges finalised on two dates is reported as two persons.

SCOPE / TARGET POPULATION

New South Wales criminal court defendants.

COVERAGE

Civil matters are recorded in Justicelink, however only data relating to criminal matters are available through BOCSAR.

DATA AVAILABILITY / DISSEMINATION

Access to unpublished data may be available on request. Refer to BOCSAR Information Service Policy.
PUBLICATIONS

NSW Criminal Court Information

COLLECTION HISTORY

Collection commenced: Justicelink was implemented in the District and Supreme Courts in February 2008, and was operating in all Local Courts from December 2009. Prior to this, data were collected by BOCSAR and are available electronically back to 1994.

Breaks in series: yes.

In 2009 there were significant changes to the way court data is both collected and counted which have affected the continuity of some published data. From 2009, offences are classified using the Australian Standard Offence Classification (ASOC) 2008 (cat. no 1234.0), rather than the 1997 version used previously. Breaches of both apprehended domestic and personal violence orders are classified in group 1531 Breach of Violence orders.

There has been inconsistent treatment and incorrect classification of breach AVO offences in the Law Part Codes database:
  • Up to 11 March 2007, there were separate law part codes for Breach Apprehended Domestic Violence Order (ADVO) and Breach Apprehended Personal Violence Order (APVO) but both were classified ASOC 1514;
  • From 12 March 2007 to 22 July 2007, only one law part code for both types of breach; classified ASOC 1514;
  • From 23 July 2007 to 9 March 2008, two separate law part codes, ADVO in 1514 and APVO in 1515;
  • From 10 March 2008, to 28 March 2008, one law part code in ASOC 1515; and
  • From 29 March 2008, two separate law part codes, ADVO in 1514 and APVO in 1515.
Note that with the implementation of ASOC 2008 (re-titled ANZSOC in 2011) breaches of both ADVO and APVO are in the same same group.

These changes mean that any breaches of Domestic Violence Orders that took place between 12 March and 22 July 2007 and between 10 March and 28 March 2008 cannot be identified separately from breaches of Personal Violence Orders using law part code. It also means that ASOC/ANZSOC alone cannot be used to separately identify breaches of ADVO from breaches of APVO.

Other details: n/a

OTHER DIRECTORY DATA SOURCES HELD BY THIS AGENCY

Computerised Operational Policing System (COPS)