anzsoc 2018 has gone mobile! · the university of melbourne #anzsoc2018 get the app on your mobile...

17
POCKET PROGRAM 31st ANNUAL AUSTRALIAN AND NEW ZEALAND SOCIETY OF CRIMINOLOGY (ANZSOC) CONFERENCE 2018 ENCOUNTERING CRIME: DOING JUSTICE 4 – 7 DECEMBER 2018 THE UNIVERSITY OF MELBOURNE www.anzsoc2018.com #ANZSOC2018 Get the app on your mobile device now, for free. 1 2 3 ACIPC 2018 Conference November 19 - November 21, 2018 South Brisbane, QLD Activity Feed Platinum Sponsor – GAMA Healthcare General Info Program My Schedule Sponsors & Exhibitors Display Posters Invited Speakers Social Functions OR Scan the QR code below Visit the above URL on your device Tap the “download” button to get the free Guidebook app Open Guidebook and look for the guide: https://guidebook.com/g/anzsoc2018/ ANZSOC 2018 Conference ANZSOC 2018 has gone mobile!

Upload: others

Post on 14-Oct-2020

1 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: ANZSOC 2018 has gone mobile! · THE UNIVERSITY OF MELBOURNE #ANZSOC2018 Get the app on your mobile device now, for free. 1 2 3 ACIPC 2018 Conference November 19 - November 21, 2018

POCKET PROGRAM

31st ANNUAL AUSTRALIAN AND NEW ZEALAND SOCIETY OF CRIMINOLOGY (ANZSOC) CONFERENCE 2018

ENCOUNTERING CRIME: DOING JUSTICE 4 – 7 DECEMBER 2018 THE UNIVERSITY OF MELBOURNE

www.anzsoc2018.com

#ANZSOC2018

Get the app on your mobile device now, for free.

1

2

3

ACIPC 2018 ConferenceNovember 19 - November 21, 2018South Brisbane, QLD

Activity Feed

Platinum Sponsor – GAMA Healthcare

General Info

Program

My Schedule

Sponsors & Exhibitors

Display Posters

Invited Speakers

Social Functions

OR Scan the QR code below

Visit the above URL on your device

Tap the “download” button to get the free Guidebook app

Open Guidebook and look for the guide:

https://guidebook.com/g/anzsoc2018/

ANZSOC 2018 Conference

ANZSOC 2018has gone mobile!

Page 2: ANZSOC 2018 has gone mobile! · THE UNIVERSITY OF MELBOURNE #ANZSOC2018 Get the app on your mobile device now, for free. 1 2 3 ACIPC 2018 Conference November 19 - November 21, 2018

ENCOUNTERING CRIME: DOING JUSTICE | 4 – 7 DECEMBER 2018 | THE UNIVERSITY OF MELBOURNE 3

Convenor’s WelcomeOn behalf of the Conference Organising Committee, it gives us great pleasure to welcome you to the 2018 ANZSOC Conference.

The theme for this year’s conference is ENCOUNTERING CRIME: DOING JUSTICE.

ANZSOC holds a time-honoured place at the intersection of academic criminology and the many fields it encounters.

The 2018 conference continues this tradition by inviting and encouraging robust exchange of voices, visions and experiences of crime, criminology, criminal justice and justice more broadly conceived.

This year’s theme speaks to the many ways we as researchers and practitioners encounter crime and find ways of doing justice – across time, place and scale – from the everyday to the extraordinary, the interpersonal to the international.

We thank you for attending and trust you will enjoy what promises to be a professionally and socially fulfilling few days.

Professor Fiona Haines and Dr Diana Johns 2018 ANZSOC Conference Committee Co-Chairs

ANZSOC CONFERENCE ORGANISING COMMITTEECo-Chairs

» Professor Fiona Haines, University of Melbourne, School of Social and Political Sciences

» Dr Diana Johns, University of Melbourne, School of Social and Political Sciences

Committee Members

» Dr Juliet Rogers, University of Melbourne, School of Social and Political Sciences

» Dr Mark Wood, University of Melbourne, School of Social and Political Sciences

» Associate Professor Rebecca Wickes, Monash University, School of Social Sciences (ANZSOC Australian Vice President)

Sponsors Special RequirementsEvery effort has been made to ensure delegates with special requirements are catered for. Should you require any assistance, please contact the Registration Desk to enable us to make your attendance at the conference a pleasant and comfortable experience.

REGISTRATION TIMESTuesday: 17:00 -19:00

Wednesday: 08:00 - 17:30

Thursday: 08:15 - 18:00

Friday: 08:15 - 15:30

EXHIBITION HOURSWednesday: 08:00 - 17:30

Thursday: 08:15 - 17:45

Friday: 08:15 - 16:30

CONFERENCE ATTIREDress for the conference and social functions, smart casual.

INTERNETTo access the wireless network:

» Ensure Wi-Fi is enabled on your device. » Select Visitor from available wireless networks. » Launch a web browser and access any website (On some devices

this is done automatically). Your web browser will redirect to the Visitor login screen.

» Enter the Visitor username anzsoc2018 and password @2nAqG. » Click Connect/Ok.

Silver Sponsors

Ice Cream Social Sponsor Morning Tea Sponsor

Exhibitors

NAME BADGESDelegates and exhibitors must wear their name badge at all times during the conference. Badges will serve as identification for entrance to all sessions, catering breaks and social functions. For your information, the colours of the name badges represent:

Delegates, Sponsors, Exhibitors White

Volunteers Orange

CONFERENCE EVALUATIONWe value your feedback and encourage all delegates to rate sessions live via the Conference App.

2 31ST ANNUAL AUSTRALIAN AND NEW ZEALAND SOCIETY OF CRIMINOLOGY CONFERENCE

Page 3: ANZSOC 2018 has gone mobile! · THE UNIVERSITY OF MELBOURNE #ANZSOC2018 Get the app on your mobile device now, for free. 1 2 3 ACIPC 2018 Conference November 19 - November 21, 2018

ENCOUNTERING CRIME: DOING JUSTICE | 4 – 7 DECEMBER 2018 | THE UNIVERSITY OF MELBOURNE 5

Social Functions

WELCOME RECEPTIONTuesday 4 December 2018

17:00 – 19:00

University House Professors’ Walk

112 Professors Walk, The University of Melbourne

The Welcome Reception is the first social function of the conference. Don’t miss this opportunity to catch up with colleagues and to meet other delegates, speakers and sponsors.

CONFERENCE DINNERWednesday 5 December

19:00 – 22:00

Ormond College

49 College Crescent Parkville

This is an optional event with tickets needing to be purchased in advance.

If you have not registered for the dinner but would like to attend please visit the registration desk prior to 13:30 on Wednesday 5 December to see whether space is available.

Tickets are $120 including buffet dinner, drinks and entertainment.

Maps

ARTS WEST GROUND FLOOR

ARTS WEST LEVEL 3OLD ARTS LEVEL 1

OLD ARTS LEVEL 2

4 31ST ANNUAL AUSTRALIAN AND NEW ZEALAND SOCIETY OF CRIMINOLOGY CONFERENCE

Page 4: ANZSOC 2018 has gone mobile! · THE UNIVERSITY OF MELBOURNE #ANZSOC2018 Get the app on your mobile device now, for free. 1 2 3 ACIPC 2018 Conference November 19 - November 21, 2018

6 31ST ANNUAL AUSTRALIAN AND NEW ZEALAND SOCIETY OF CRIMINOLOGY CONFERENCE ENCOUNTERING CRIME: DOING JUSTICE | 4 – 7 DECEMBER 2018 | THE UNIVERSITY OF MELBOURNE 7

Exhibition Floorplan

2018 ANZSOC CONFERENCE – GOING GREEN!The 2018 ANZSOC Conference Organising Committee is working hard to make the conference as environmentally friendly as possible.

As such delegates are encouraged to bring their own coffee cups.

As an alternative, delegates can purchase a reusable coffee cup for $9 each available at the Coffee Cart.

If using a disposable cup, delegates will be able to make a gold coin donation, with proceeds going to a Environmental Justice Australia.

EXHIBITOR LISTING# Company

01 Springer

02 SAGE Publishing

03 Taylor and Francis

04 Queensland Sentencing Advisory Council

Coffee Cart – Operating from the begging of morning tea until the end of lunch on Wednesday, Thursday and Friday

Cannoli Cart – Operating during lunch on Wednesday only. Sponsored by the University of Melbourne Master of Criminology Program

Invited Speakers

Professor Michelle BrownUniversity of Tennessee, USA

Professor Jeff FerrellTexas Christian University, USA,

Visiting Professor of Criminology, University of Kent, UK

Commissioner Jill Gallagher AO

Victorian Treaty Advancement Commissioner

Dr Mary GrahamUniversity of Queensland

Professor Joseph PuglieseMacquarie University

Deborah Glass OBEVictorian Ombudsman

Emeritus Professor Richard Harding

Law School, University of Western Australia

INTERNATIONAL

NATIONAL

Page 5: ANZSOC 2018 has gone mobile! · THE UNIVERSITY OF MELBOURNE #ANZSOC2018 Get the app on your mobile device now, for free. 1 2 3 ACIPC 2018 Conference November 19 - November 21, 2018

8 31ST ANNUAL AUSTRALIAN AND NEW ZEALAND SOCIETY OF CRIMINOLOGY CONFERENCE ENCOUNTERING CRIME: DOING JUSTICE | 4 – 7 DECEMBER 2018 | THE UNIVERSITY OF MELBOURNE 9

TUESDAY 4 DECEMBER 2018 17:00 – 19:00 Welcome Reception University House Professors’ Walk

WEDNESDAY 5 DECEMBER 2018 08:00 – 08:45 Registration, Arrival Tea and Coffee, Exhibition Arts West Ground Floor Atrium Registration, Arrival Tea and Coffee, Exhibition Arts West Ground Floor Atrium

Room Old Arts 122 (Public Lecture Theatre)

Stream Plenary

Session Chair Fiona Haines

08:45 – 09:00

Official conference openingWelcome to CountryWurundjeri People ElderWelcome from ANZSOC PresidentA/Professor Tara McGeeWelcome from the 2018 ANZSOC Conference ChairProfessor Fiona Haines

09:00 – 10:00 Keynote Address – Criminology AdriftProfessor Jeff Ferrell

10:00 – 10:30 Award Presentations: » New Scholar Prize, Presented by Dr Jade Lindley » Award for Excellence in Teaching, Presented by A/Professor Tara McGee » Best Honours/Masters Thesis in Criminology » PhD Student Paper Prize, Presented by A/Professor Rebecca Wickes

10:30 – 11:00 Morning Tea and Exhibition Arts West Ground Floor Atrium Sponosored by

Program

Page 6: ANZSOC 2018 has gone mobile! · THE UNIVERSITY OF MELBOURNE #ANZSOC2018 Get the app on your mobile device now, for free. 1 2 3 ACIPC 2018 Conference November 19 - November 21, 2018

10 31ST ANNUAL AUSTRALIAN AND NEW ZEALAND SOCIETY OF CRIMINOLOGY CONFERENCE ENCOUNTERING CRIME: DOING JUSTICE | 4 – 7 DECEMBER 2018 | THE UNIVERSITY OF MELBOURNE 11

Room Old Arts 122 (PLT) Old Arts – 103 (Theatre A) Old Arts – 124 (Theatre C) Old Arts – 129 (Theatre B) Old Arts – 224 (Sth Theatre) Old Arts – 155 (Theatre D) Old Arts – 257 (CLS2) Old Arts – 263 (CLS1) Arts West North Wing – 355

Stream Young People, Crime and Justice Young People, Crime and Justice Extending Punishment Digital Criminology State Crime and Structural Justice

Sentencing Victims and Trauma Crime and the City White Collar Crime

Topic Children in state care PANEL – Communication underpins access to justice

Hidden punishment – fines and infringement notices

Technology-facilitated harms Understanding Inequality and Challenging State Complicity

International dimension in sentencing

Processes and Procedures of In/Justice

Invisible powers to punish Regulating Corporations and tackling corruption

Session Chair Diana Johns Tara McGee Jeremy Prichard Robin Cameron Jennifer Balint Marni Manning Dave McDonald Rebecca Wickes Katrina Clifford

11:00 – 11:20 Lessons Learned: The Imple-mentation of a Community-Based Approach for Young People in Residential Out of Home CareRenee O’Donnell, Richard Watkins, Soula Kontomichalos

Behind the Behaviour: Considering the Impact of Unmet Communication Needs in the Justice SystemMary Woodward, Pamela Snow

The rise of criminal infringement notices: a cause for concern?Elyse Methven

Typologies of online CEM offenders – looking back, looking forwardTony Krone

Julian Assange and state crimeScott Poynting

Revisable permanent prison sentence: the de facto life sentence in SpainMaría del Mar, Martin Aragon

Victims’ rights and procedural justice in New ZealandKim McGregor

Invisible powers to punish – the epitome of individualised controlClare Farmer

Procedural justice and the compliance of betting-motivated corruption policies in two Australian sportsReynald Lastra

11:20 – 11:40 The Delivery of Life Story Work in Residential Out of Home Care: A Systematic Review of the LiteratureSoula Kontomichalos, Renee O’Donell

Communication privilege: could your communication be compromising your intentions? Rosalie Martin

Relative deterrence of infringements for risky driving behaviours: does time to next infringement differ based on offence type?Hayley McDonald

Ransomware: Crime script analysisGeorgina Fuller

Turning the detention centre inside out: Counterveillance of state-organised crimmigration in AustraliaGreg Martin

Factors Contributing to Terrorism Sentencing Outcomes in IndonesiaMilda Istiqomah

Increasing the Role of Third Parties: Separate Legal Representation for Sexual Assault Victims in IrelandMary Iliadis

The geography of (identity) crime: using geographic profiling principles and assumptions to explain criminal choices in ATM skimming offencesAdam Marsden

Encountering corporate harms: doing (criminal) justice?Liz Campbell

11:40 – 12:00 The Exacerbation of Vulnerability: The Intersection of Bail, Homelessness and Care in the NSW Children’s CourtEmma Colvin

Communication, Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder (FASD) and Youth Justice: Findings from the Banksia Hill Detention Centre project in Western AustraliaNatalie Kippin

The Criminalisation of Fantasy MaterialHadeel Al-Alosi

Transnational white nationalism: The digitally-mediated globalism of contemporary hate cultureRobin Cameron

‘Deepening Reform’ in Xi Jinping’s China: the case of China’s criminal trial reformsSusan Trevaskes

Longitudinal Constitutional Trends in Clemency since Sebba (1977)Daniel Pascoe

The impact of local commissioning on victim services in England and Wales: an empirical study.Lesley Simmonds

The Moral Contestability of Finance: Embodying the financial markets in the City of LondonAlexander Simpson

Understanding and responding to criminal conduct in organisations by senior managementRussell Smith

12:00 – 12:20 ‘Cross-over kids’: Effective responses to children and young people in the youth justice and statutory child protection systemSusan Baidawi, Rosemary Sheehan

What exactly do speech pathologists do in Youth Justice?: A practical overviewStella Martin, Nathaniel Swain

Professionals views on how to conduct investigative interviews with minimally verbal adultsMadeline Bearman

Legal and Theoretical Frameworks for Responding to Online Political Extremism: Lessons for the Australian ContextImogen Richards

Corruption in the Criminal Justice System of Ghana: Perspectives of Criminal Justice OfficialsMoses Agaawena Amagnya

Issues that sexual assault and family violence victims face in the criminal justice systemSarah Tapper

Strict liability for corporations involved in private sector corruption: a tool to reshape a culture of corporate misconduct?Hannah Harris

12:20 – 12:40 Transforming the communication involved in justice processes in New Zealand Sally Kedge

Juror perceptions of witness inattentional blindness during criminal trialsHayley Cullen

‘Cyber rape’: Exploring Revenge Porn from a Psychological PerspectiveTiffany Lavis, Tegan Starr, Ms Tahlee Mckinlay

Corporate culpability in Law and HorrorPenny Crofts

“To me it was normal”: Making sense of family violence from the perspective of perpetrators and the implications for treatmentBronwyn Morrison, Marianne Bevan

Responsive to Whom? A Critical Analysis of Risk-Based and Responsive Regulation and its Application to Australian Pharmaceutical IndustryRhiannon Bandiera

Page 7: ANZSOC 2018 has gone mobile! · THE UNIVERSITY OF MELBOURNE #ANZSOC2018 Get the app on your mobile device now, for free. 1 2 3 ACIPC 2018 Conference November 19 - November 21, 2018

12 31ST ANNUAL AUSTRALIAN AND NEW ZEALAND SOCIETY OF CRIMINOLOGY CONFERENCE ENCOUNTERING CRIME: DOING JUSTICE | 4 – 7 DECEMBER 2018 | THE UNIVERSITY OF MELBOURNE 13

12:40 – 13:40 Lunch and Exhibition Arts West Ground Floor Atrium During Wednesday lunchtime, there will be a cannoli cart kindly sponsored by the Master of Criminology program at the University of Melbourne. All conference attendees are invited to grab a fresh cannoli and connect with our Masters and broader Criminology program here at Melbourne. This is a great opportunity for past, present and future MCrim staff and students to come together, and for individual attendees and organisations to hear more about our program here at Melbourne. We will have staff and current students available to answer any questions, and a mailing list sign-up sheet to keep you updated on our events here – so please come and join us!

Room Old Arts 122 (PLT) Old Arts – 124 (Theatre C) Old Arts – 129 (Theatre B) Old Arts – 224 (Sth Theatre) Old Arts – 155 (Theatre D) Old Arts – 257 (CLS2) Old Arts – 263 (CLS1) Arts West North Wing – 355

Stream Young People, Crime and Justice Extending Punishment Digital Criminology State Crime and Structural Justice

Sentencing Victims and Trauma Crime and the City Green Criminology

Topic Young people and violence, victims and perpetrators

Risky bodies, risky systems: Post-prison policy, practice and experience

Digital innovations in Offending and Control

PANEL – Expanding Criminological Frames: Global/Local

Public confidence in sentencing

Processes and Procedures of In/Justice

Segregation, inequality and crime

Green criminology

Session Chair Hayley Passmore Tess Bartlett Janet Chan Juliet Rogers Arie Freiberg Fiona Dowsley Alison Young Rick Sarre

13:40 – 14:00 Policing & Desire Tallace Bissett, Peta Malins

The lived experience of men convicted of sexual offences who are subject to intensive community supervision in QueenslandDanielle Harris

Reassembling Crime and Security Knowledge: The role of intelligence analysts at a time of technological changeJanet Chan

International Crime, Justice and the Promise of CommunityNesam Mcmillan

Judicial rebellion? How New Zealand’s three strikes sentencing law has been appliedNessa Lynch

Can the government better meet the justice needs of victims through a restorative approach?Annaliese Wilson

Segregation, inequality and crime: Examining the link across Australian neighbourhoodsMichelle Sydes

Carbon Fraud and Criminal Networks in REDD+ projects in Papua New GuineaBabida David Sepmat Gavara-Nanu

14:00 – 14:20 Youth Street Violence Study and Evaluation on F.O.C.U.S. Intervention Strategy in Hong KongWIlson Chan, Ka Wu

Monsters in Our Midst: Exploring Regulation and Control in Communities Notified About Sex Offender ReleaseJordan Anderson

“I’ve never had to go down this path before”: Applicant experiences of an online family violence intervention order process.Stuart Ross

State crime, art and making harm visibleJennifer Balint

Serious offending on community correction orders in VictoriaCynthia Marwood

Restorative justice programs for sexual and family violence cases: the need for evaluationDaye Gang

Riots, cat killers and regulated vices: collective anxiety and the management of danger in two neighbourhoods in Singapore Laura Naegler, Joe Greener

Illegal fishing as a maritime security threat for Australia: implications overlaps and responsesJade Lindley

14:20 – 14:40 Bringing in the Bystander: Youth Bystander Representations and Sexual Assault Prevention EducationSarah Whitney

Perpetual Punishment in NSWMindy Sotiri

Predicting Crime Rates Using Demographic Data and Features Derived From Social MediaTony Moriarty, Praveen Kumar, Richard Nichol

Broadening the Criminological Terrain – Public Criminology meets Southern CriminologyKaren Joe Laidler

Measuring public attitudes to sentencing: A focus group approach to assessing public responses toward sentencing for child homicide by Queensland criminal courtsMarni Manning, Laura Hidderley

Doing Therapeutic Justice for the families of the Disappeared: Exhumations as Justice in SpainNatalia Maystorovich-Chulio

Challenging the narrative of broken communities: informal social controls and the 2011 English RiotsDeborah Platts-Fowler

Taking water from the basin: when does ‘theft’ constitute a ‘crime’Katrina Clifford

14:40 – 15:00 Radical Rambos: Analysing the motives behind Australia’s teenage supporters of DaeshMargarita Dimaksyan

Criminal records, discrimination and Aboriginal communities: enhancing employment opportunitiesBronwyn Naylor, Georgina Heydon

“Drugs? Online? Naaaah surely not”: perceptions of risk and reward amongst darknet drug vendorsJames Martin

A post-criminological framework for Indigenous children’s wellbeing: an analysis of the NT Youth Justice Royal CommissionThalia Anthony

Building public and professional confidence in Queensland’s criminal justice system: The role of sentencing councilsJohn Robertson

Bringing online child abuse material into the family home: the intersection between online child abuse material and family violenceMarg Liddell, Natalie Walker

Domestic Violence: Albania, as a Post Communist Country in the BalkansArbora Aliaj

Natural disasters and violence against mothers in the Philippines. Can a conditional cash transfer program be protective?Ben Edwards

Page 8: ANZSOC 2018 has gone mobile! · THE UNIVERSITY OF MELBOURNE #ANZSOC2018 Get the app on your mobile device now, for free. 1 2 3 ACIPC 2018 Conference November 19 - November 21, 2018

14 31ST ANNUAL AUSTRALIAN AND NEW ZEALAND SOCIETY OF CRIMINOLOGY CONFERENCE ENCOUNTERING CRIME: DOING JUSTICE | 4 – 7 DECEMBER 2018 | THE UNIVERSITY OF MELBOURNE 15

15:00 – 15:20 Dissuading internet users from viewing adult-minor sex images: the results of a randomized controlled experimentJeremy Prichard, Caroline Spiranovic

“Kill all the sorcerers:” The interconnections between sorcery violence, war and peace in BougainvilleMiranda Forsyth

Restorative Justice Conferencing in an Environmental Offending Context: Applicability of Reintegrative Shaming to CorporationsMark Hamilton

A Road Map for the Next Generation of Spatial Criminology Decision Support Systems; leveraging Current Advancements of Spatial Data InfrastructuresSoheil Sabri

15:20 – 15:50 Afternoon Tea Arts West Ground Floor Atrium Afternoon Tea Arts West Ground Floor Atrium

Room Old Arts 122 (PLT) Old Arts – 103 (Theatre A) Old Arts – 124 (Theatre C) Old Arts – 129 (Theatre B) Old Arts – 224 (Sth Theatre) Old Arts – 155 (Theatre D) Old Arts – 257 (CLS2) Old Arts – 263 (CLS1) Arts West North Wing – 355

Stream Young People, Crime and Justice Young People, Crime and Justice Extending Punishment Digital Criminology State Crime and Structural Justice

Sentencing Victims and Trauma Crime and the City Policing Dangerous Consumption

Topic Working with young people, reducing reoffending

ROUNDTABLE Inside and Outside the Prison PANEL – Gender-based Crime in a Digital Age

Consequences of Invasion Informing sentencing practice and policy

PANEL PANEL – Encountering Crime in Everyday Publics

National and international focus

Session Chair Ross Homel Leanne Weber Peter Norden Nicola Henry Claire Loughnan Stuart Ross Adrian Howe Alison Young John Fitzgerland

15:50 – 16:10 A clinical study on the effectiveness of a culturally-attuned Cognitive Behavioural Therapy in working with delinquent youth in Hong KongWilson Chan

Policing the crisis? African youth, crime, media & policing in MelbourneLeanne Weber, Kathryn Benier, Jarrett Blaustein, Diana Johns, Sara Maher, Rebecca Wickes

Impacts of Defunding Tasmania’s Reintegration for Ex-Offenders ProgramEbba Herrlander Birgerson

Technologically-Facilitated Violence Against Women and Girls: Can Canadian Criminal Law Respond?Jane Bailey

Imagined and Real Decolo-nizing Criminal Justice: A multi-disciplinary examina-tion of Victoria’s reforms and implications for institutions, procedures and researchNicholas Verginis

Suspended Sentences: Uncertain Unstable, Unpopular and Unnecessary?Arie Freiberg

Encountering Femicide – Doing Justice to Victims of Intimate Partner FemicideAdrian Howe

Memorialising CrimeAlison Young

Policing people who use drugs across the globe: How does Australia compare?Caitlin Hughes

16:10 – 16:30 Project RADAR – a counselling and treatment program for young people with hidden drug abuse problems and drug-related criminal offencesWilson Chan, Bob Lee, Ka Wu

Resisting the Politics of Punishment: Political Culture and the Evolution of Canadian Criminal Justice PolicyKyle Mulrooney

Image-Based Sexual Abuse: Victim ExperiencesNicola Henry

‘Bare Life’ and the ‘Camp’: the Carceral Archipelago in postcolonial AustraliaHarry Blagg, Thalia Anthony

Should orders for victims’ financial reparation become sentencing orders?Anusha Kenny

The Homeless Encounter in Public SpaceKajsa Lundberg

Mapping the terrain of engagement with darknet drug cryptomarkets in New ZealandLucy Moss-Mason

16:30 – 16:50 Overlap between youth justice supervision and alcohol and other drug treatment services in AustraliaArianne Schlumpp

“Out here I’m not living”: The challenges of staying on “the straight and narrow” post release in New ZealandBronwyn Morrison, Jill Bowman

Can anonymous online reporting of sexual assault improve justice outcomes?Georgina Heydon

Indigenous women’s lives matter: Reflections on Coronial Inquests into Intimate Partner HomicidesKyllie Cripps

Silence Matters: Quantifying the use of the right to silence in the summary jurisdiction of NSWEugene Schofield-Georgeson

‘Mapping Epistemologies and Geographies of Memoralisation: Street Harassment and Online Disclosure Practices’Bianca Fileborn

New operational drug policing models: Time for a new focus?John Fitzgerald

16:50 – 17:10 Mandated therapeutic treatment for young people suffering from severe substance abuseJennifer Bowles

Reducing the prison population: the challenges of pretrial servicesMax Travers

The Challenges of Policing Image-Based Sexual AbuseAsher Flynn

“A question of meaning: First Peoples women and other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment“Sjharn Leeson

Pre-Trial Liberty: Right or Privilege?Marilyn McMahon, Paul McGorrery

‘The Spatial Haunting of Child Sexual Abuse’Dave McDonald

Drug Muling for LoveMonica Whitty

Indicates Collaborative Conversation Session

Page 9: ANZSOC 2018 has gone mobile! · THE UNIVERSITY OF MELBOURNE #ANZSOC2018 Get the app on your mobile device now, for free. 1 2 3 ACIPC 2018 Conference November 19 - November 21, 2018

16 31ST ANNUAL AUSTRALIAN AND NEW ZEALAND SOCIETY OF CRIMINOLOGY CONFERENCE ENCOUNTERING CRIME: DOING JUSTICE | 4 – 7 DECEMBER 2018 | THE UNIVERSITY OF MELBOURNE 17

17:10 – 17:30 Continued ... Continued ... What’s hot and what’s not? Perspectives on pornography in the digital ageSamantha Keene

Continued ...

19:00 – 22:00 2018 ANZSOC Conference Dinner Ormond CollegeIncluding the presentation of the Distinguished Criminologist Award

We invite delegates and guests to join us at Ormond College for the conference dinner. This is an optional event with tickets needing to be purchased in advance.

THURSDAY 6 DECEMBER 201808:15 – 08:45 Registration, Arrival Tea and Coffee, Exhibition Arts West Ground Floor Atrium Registration, Arrival Tea and Coffee, Exhibition Arts West Ground Floor Atrium

Room Old Arts 122 (Public Lecture Theatre) Old Arts 122 (Public Lecture Theatre)

Stream Plenary Plenary

Session Chair Diana Johns

08:45 – 09:00 Day two openingAward Presentations

» Adam Sutton Crime Prevention Award, Presented by A/Professor Jeremy Prichard and Aless Sutton » Indigenous Justice Award » Undergraduate Student Paper Prize, Presented by A/Professor Tara McGee

09:00 – 10:00 Keynote Address – Doing Justice: Treaty in VictoriaCommissioner Jill Gallagher AO

10:00 – 10:25 Morning Tea Arts West Ground Floor Atrium Morning Tea Arts West Ground Floor Atrium

Room Old Arts 122 (PLT) Old Arts – 103 (Theatre A) Old Arts – 124 (Theatre C) Old Arts – 129 (Theatre B) Old Arts – 224 (Sth Theatre) Old Arts – 155 (Theatre D) Old Arts – 257 (CLS2) Old Arts – 263 (CLS1) Arts West North Wing – 355

Stream Young People, Crime and Justice Sexual Offending Extending Punishment Digital Criminology State Crime and Structural Justice

Sentencing Victims and Trauma Crime and the City Policing Dangerous Consumption

Topic Changing perspectives on ‘youth’ and young people

Sexual Offending and Abuse: From prevention to prediction

Working to support children and families of prisoners

PANEL – Visual Criminology: Policing the Image

PANEL – Problems and Solutions in U.S. Criminal Justice

Innovation in sentencing Sex, Gender and Violence Terrorism, Crime Space and Place

Programs and populations

Session Chair Diana Johns Anastasia Powell Julie Stubbs Alyce McGovern Jennifer Balint John Robertson Bronwyn Taylor Rebecca Wickes John Fitzgerald

10:25 – 10:45 Presentation of the Koorie Youth Council Report, ‘Ngaga-dji’ (‘Hear me’ in Woi Wurrung language)Mr Indi Clarke

A decade of Victorian inquests, commissions and inquiries into family violence and institutional child abuse: comparing the processesAnita Mackay

Hyper-masculinity or healthier masculinities? An exploration of incarcerated fathering and prison masculinitiesTess Bartlett

Icarus and Goliath: mixed metaphors, Mardi Gras 2013 and the politics of representationJustin Ellis

The Wild, Wild West: What Will it Take for America to Lose Its Love Affair With Guns?Elizabeth Athaide-Victor

In Search of Rehabilitation: Taking Stock of Trends in Sentencing Organizational Offenders in Canada since the Westray ReformsJennifer Quaid

Sexual violence at music festivals: how can we change the tune?Bianca Fileborn, Phillip Wadds

Al Shabab and Kenya: the role of space and place in shaping manifestations of terrorismLinet Muthoni

Responding to the growing complexity of forensic clients with AOD concerns in the communitySophie Aitken,Skye Mackay

Page 10: ANZSOC 2018 has gone mobile! · THE UNIVERSITY OF MELBOURNE #ANZSOC2018 Get the app on your mobile device now, for free. 1 2 3 ACIPC 2018 Conference November 19 - November 21, 2018

18 31ST ANNUAL AUSTRALIAN AND NEW ZEALAND SOCIETY OF CRIMINOLOGY CONFERENCE ENCOUNTERING CRIME: DOING JUSTICE | 4 – 7 DECEMBER 2018 | THE UNIVERSITY OF MELBOURNE 19

10:45 – 11:05 Continued ... Institutional Abuse and Organizational Reform in the Australian Defence Force (1969-)Ben Wadham

The cost of caring: uncovering the costs for grandparents raising grandchildren with incarcerated parentsCatherine Flynn

Constructing Cops: Cultural Forces and Policing PracticesAlyce McGovern

CJ Cultural Competence and Deaf CultureTiffany Turner

Neurolaw in Australia: An Empirical Study of the Use of Neuroscientific Evidence in SentencingArmin Alimardani

A Woman’s Right to Be Spanked? BDSM and IPV in the CJSNadia David

Risk terrain modelling of contemporary Violent Dissident Republican activity in BelfastZoe Marchment

Substance Use as a Strategy for Managing Stress for Homeless WomenHelena Menih

11:05 – 11:25 Fathers of the Year: the Queensland Police Force as a leader in juvenile justice in the years before FitzgeraldPaul Bleakley

Sexual offenders in New Zealand: Gender disparities in police proceedings and judicial sentencingKelley Burton

Relieving overcrowding in women’s prisons in Queensland: What it means for female offendersSandy Sacre

Child protection or populist politics: Changes to legislation in the wake of the Bill Henson incident.Linda Wilken

Attention Deficit: The School-to-Prison Pipeline and how to interrupt its PathSarah Devyn

Post-Provocation Sentencing in Domestic and Non-Domestic Homicides: The Role of Mental Illness and/or Impairment in Defence NarrativesDanielle Tyson

Sex Workers’ Plans to Exit and Anticipated Fears: Roles of Trauma Histories, Relationships, and External ThreatsMary Finn

“A combination of extortion and civic duty”: Reconsidering gangs in ‘weak state’ communitiesRichard Evans

The Communities Against Substance Misuse ProjectSiobhan Allen, Peter Lunney

11:25 – 11:45 Conceptualising ‘youth’ through the lived experiences of case managersJoel Robert McGregor

Can Crime Scene Behaviours Differentiate Between and Predict Serial Versus Non-Serial Rapists?Serena Davidson

Inside and Outside: Perspectives of Two DirectorsRosalie Martin

Body Worn Images: The New Aesthetics of PolicingCarolyn McKay

Seeing Red: Correctional Reform and the Dignity for Incarcerated Women ActElizabeth Athaide-Victor

An integrated approach to designing, delivering and reporting research: Combining practitioner and academic perspectives within the field of sentencing researchElena Marchetti, Marni Manning

Impact of the audiovisual executions of the Daesh in the processes of radicalization and jihadist recruitment according to the target audienceMiguel Ángel Soria Verde, Núria Querol Viñas, Ariadna Trespaderne Dedeu

‘For now we see through a glass, darkly’ Using police data to scrutinise the use, effect and effectiveness of Australia’s police imposed patron banning provisionsClare Farmer

11:45 – 12:05 Mini Me: The Adultification of the Victorian Juvenile Justice SystemNatalia Antolak-saper

Media Reporting of homicide in the digital ageLaura Wajnryb McDonald

12:05 – 13:25 Lunch and Exhibition Arts West Ground Floor Atrium Lunch and Exhibition Arts West Ground Floor Atrium

2018 ANZSOC Annual General Meeting Old Arts – 103 (Theatre A) 2018 ANZSOC Annual General Meeting Old Arts – 103 (Theatre A)

Room Old Arts 122 (Public Lecture Theatre)

Stream Plenary

13:25 – 14:40 Panel, Ethical Tensions in CriminologyFacilitator, Dr Juliet Rogers

Panellists » Professor Joseph Pugliese » Dr Mary Graham » Emeritus Professor Richard Harding » Deborah Glass OBE

Page 11: ANZSOC 2018 has gone mobile! · THE UNIVERSITY OF MELBOURNE #ANZSOC2018 Get the app on your mobile device now, for free. 1 2 3 ACIPC 2018 Conference November 19 - November 21, 2018

20 31ST ANNUAL AUSTRALIAN AND NEW ZEALAND SOCIETY OF CRIMINOLOGY CONFERENCE ENCOUNTERING CRIME: DOING JUSTICE | 4 – 7 DECEMBER 2018 | THE UNIVERSITY OF MELBOURNE 21

Room Old Arts 122 (PLT) Old Arts – 103 (Theatre A) Old Arts – 124 (Theatre C) Old Arts – 129 (Theatre B) Old Arts – 224 (Sth Theatre) Old Arts – 155 (Theatre D) Old Arts – 257 (CLS2) Arts West North Wing – 355

Stream Young People, Crime and Justice Carceral Borders Extending Punishment Victims and Trauma Policing Gender and Crime Wrongful Conviction Policing Dangerous Consumption

Topic PANEL – Development & Prevention of Youth Crime & ASB

Border violences and control Improving prison practices Inflicting Trauma PANEL – “Police education: new models, new approaches and emerging trends”

PANEL – Intimate Partner violence, risk and security: Securing women’s lives in a global world

ROUNDTABLE Models

Session Chair Emma Colvin Leanne Weber Diana Johns Juliet Rogers Commissioner Scott Tilyard Bianca Fileborn Greg Stratton Caitlin Hughes

14:45 – 15:05 Preventing Youth Crime at a Whole-of-Community Level by Measuring and Responding to the Social and Emotional Needs of ChildrenTara McGee

Manus Island Prison TheoryBehrouz Boochani

OPCAT: What does it mean and how can it improve prison practice?Deborah Glass OBE

Critical Hate Studies: a theoretical perspectiveZoe James

Introduction, Tasmania Police Deputy Commissioner Scott TilyardSnapshot from the UK – Creating a Graduate Police ForceJenny Fleming

Intimate partner violence, risk and security: securing women’s lives in a global worldKate Fitz-Gibbon

Wrongful conviction research in Australia: Strategies and approaches to understanding the unknown and overlookedGreg Stratton, Rachel Dioso-Villa, Jane Tudor-Owen, Jacqueline Fuller, Katie Hail-Jares, Joseph MacFarlane

The nature of illicit drug supply and current Australian criminal justice responses: Social supply and sentencing.Melissa Bull

15:05 – 15:25 Does Family Support Reduce Youth Crime in Socially Disadvantaged Communities?Ross Homel

Deathscapes: Mapping Race and Violence in Settler Societies. A Dialogue.Joseph Pugliese, Maria Giannacopoulos

Post-release support needs of African Australians leaving prison in VictoriaGerald Onsando, Mamadou Diamanka

Victims’ Pathways Towards Wellbeing in the Aftermath of Serious Violent CrimeHolly Blackmore

Creating a positive discourse about police tertiary education – analysis from a case that worksIsabelle Bartkowiak-Théron

Temporary migration & family violence: the borders of belonging & protectionMarie Segrave

Who Are Friends? The Changing Definition of ‘Friends’ in Social Supply NetworksKatie Lowe

15:25 – 15:45 A family stress-proximal process model for understanding the effects of close family member imprisonment on adolescents’ alcohol useKirsten Besemer

Where are the Tampas?Willem de Lint, Maria Giannacopoulos

Reconceptualising rehabilitation in women’s prisonsElaine Genders, Elaine Player

Victim memory and psychological response to repeated traumatic eventsNatali Dilevski

What makes a good ‘cop’? What we know and what we don’t know…’Roberta Julian

Considering Victim Safety When Sentencing Intimate Partner OffendersJulia Tolmie

A National Take-Home Naloxone Program for AustraliaJames Petty

15:45 – 16:05 Linked Lives: Antisocial Behaviour Across Three GenerationsTara McGee

‘Closure’ at Manus Island and Carceral Expansion in the Open Air PrisonClaire Loughnan, Maria Giannacopoulos

Prison work as dirty work in Australia: Form and consequences for practice and reformAnna Eriksson, Ariel Yap

Police education in VietnamMelissa Jardine

Spaceless Violence: Technology-facilitated Abuse and Stalking in the Context of Domestic ViolenceBridget Harris

Sober and Orderly: A Short History of Policing Public Drunkenness in New South WalesMatthew Allen

16:05 – 16:25 Exploring a cross-over list:- responses to children caught between youth justice and child protection systemsJennifer Bowles, Rosemary Sheehan, Susan Baidawi

Climate Change Migration and the Political Management of RiskElizabeth Stanley

Making sense of ‘green care’ in prisonsGary Veale, Abigail Wild

Up-Skilling police officers online: delivering a different type of higher education for serving policeSancia WestPanel Wrap UpScott Tilyard

Indicates Collaborative Conversation Session

Page 12: ANZSOC 2018 has gone mobile! · THE UNIVERSITY OF MELBOURNE #ANZSOC2018 Get the app on your mobile device now, for free. 1 2 3 ACIPC 2018 Conference November 19 - November 21, 2018

22 31ST ANNUAL AUSTRALIAN AND NEW ZEALAND SOCIETY OF CRIMINOLOGY CONFERENCE ENCOUNTERING CRIME: DOING JUSTICE | 4 – 7 DECEMBER 2018 | THE UNIVERSITY OF MELBOURNE 23

16:25 – 16:45 Afternoon Tea Arts West Ground Floor Atrium Afternoon Tea Arts West Ground Floor Atrium

Room Old Arts 122 (PLT) Old Arts – 103 (Theatre A) Old Arts – 124 (Theatre C) Old Arts – 129 (Theatre B) Old Arts – 224 (Sth Theatre) Old Arts – 155 (Theatre D) Old Arts – 257 (CLS2) Old Arts – 263 (CLS1) Arts West North Wing – 355

Stream Young People, Crime and Justice Carceral Borders Extending Punishment Digital Criminology State Crime and Structural Justice

Innovative Justice Victims and Trauma Crime Management Policing

Topic Restorative justice and diversion of young people

Everyday experiences of the internal border

Reoffending risk – bail, gradual release, community sanctions

GPS, geospatial tools and surveillance

Policing and State Crime ROUDTABLE PANEL – Coercive Control Policing: From prevention to crime control: National and International Perspectives

Policing and the Public

Session Chair Marg Liddell Claire Loughnan Danielle Harris Faith Gordon Dave McDonald Nareeda Lewers Roberta Julian Loene Howes John Fitzgerald

16:45 – 17:05 Restorative Justice in Hong Kong: Its Role in Youth Justice and Future ChallengesDennis Wong

Resisting the ‘structurally embedded border’ in AustraliaLeanne Weber

Innocent until proven guilty: really?Karen Gelb, Caroline Spiranovic

The modest GPS as crime fighting tool in informal settlementsBernadine Benson

Policing and resilience: A comparative assessment of police organisations’ histories and futuresTariro Mutongwizo

Innovative justice interventions: The Centre for Innovative Justice team discuss their current workNareeda Lewers, Rob Hulls, Elena Campbell, Stan Winford, Jessica Richter, Anna Howard, Tallace Bissett

The Coercive Control Offence and Implications for the Policing of Domestic AbuseCharlotte Barlow

“Go ahead, make my day.” Current trends and evidence regarding police, firearms and crime control.Rick Sarre

Civic activism, citizen-led policing and the future of community crime prevention in New ZealandTrevor Bradley

17:05 – 17:25 Beyond Restorative Justice: Conflict resolution within an institutional ethos of respectRosalie Martin, Rob White

Rejecting Syrian Asylum seekers: violations of the Principle of Non Refoulement in Lebanon.Vasja Badalic

Gambling on freedom: temporary and gradual prison release in UkraineAnton Symkovych

The commodification of mobile phone surveillance: An analysis of the consumer spyware industryDiarmaid Harkin

Police Violence and Police Complaints: Independence, Integrity and Individual JusticeClare Torrible

Coercive Control: A clinical or a legal concept? Problems and possibilitiesKate Fitz-Gibbon

‘Do police need to be armed for their own safety?’ A comparative study of police militarisation, weaponisation, and officer safety in urban communitiesRichard Evans, Clare Farmer

The ‘Collective Impact’ of law enforcement and public healthSancia West

17:25 – 17:45 Supporting services to arrested youth in Hong Kong: Implications to preventive strategies of reoffendingWilson Chan, Bob Lee, Ka WuWu

Australian Immigration Detention: exploring its depth, weight, tightness and breadth as experienced by women detainees.Lorena Rivas

Rethinking Community Sanctions in the C21stJulie Stubbs, Chris Cunneen

Preserving eyewitness accounts with iWitnessedHelen Paterson

Policing in a changing Vietnam: A Southern Policing perspectiveMelissa Jardine

The victim-offender dynamic in domestic abuse and coercive control: An analysis of police dataLes Humphreys

Extradition and transnational justice administration: An analysis of domestic processes and international cooperation during requests to Australia, Canada and the United StatesSally Kennedy

An environmental approach to police deviance: Exploring situational prevention possibilities using a crime triangle frameworkKelly Hine

17:45 – 18:05 Belongingness, youth violence and violence prevention interventionsHelena Erasmus

Honoured in the Breach: Border Protection and the Australian Government’s Duty of CareRichard Harding

‘Blurring the lines’: the voluntary and community sector and service delivery for women offendersKate Burns

Doing justice in virtual reality: results of a randomised controlled trialDavid Tait

Models of police oversight: What about public trust?Emma Ryan

Controlling or Coercive Behaviour and Human Rights: Widening the Ambit of HarmMarilyn McMahon, Paul McGorrery

Crime and Justice: Crime Prevention in a Pacific city: Examples from Port MoresbyFiona Hukula

Indicates Collaborative Conversation Session

Page 13: ANZSOC 2018 has gone mobile! · THE UNIVERSITY OF MELBOURNE #ANZSOC2018 Get the app on your mobile device now, for free. 1 2 3 ACIPC 2018 Conference November 19 - November 21, 2018

24 31ST ANNUAL AUSTRALIAN AND NEW ZEALAND SOCIETY OF CRIMINOLOGY CONFERENCE ENCOUNTERING CRIME: DOING JUSTICE | 4 – 7 DECEMBER 2018 | THE UNIVERSITY OF MELBOURNE 25

FRIDAY 7 DECEMBER 201808:15 – 08:45 Registration, Arrival Tea and Coffee, Exhibition Arts West Ground Floor Atrium Registration, Arrival Tea and Coffee, Exhibition Arts West Ground Floor Atrium

Room Old Arts 122 (PLT) Old Arts – 103 (Theatre A) Old Arts – 124 (Theatre C) Old Arts – 129 (Theatre B) Old Arts – 224 (Sth Theatre) Old Arts – 155 (Theatre D) Old Arts – 257 (CLS2) Old Arts – 263 (CLS1) Arts West North Wing – 355

Stream Young People, Crime and Justice Prisons Extending Punishment Digital Criminology State Crime and Structural Justice

Digital Criminology Victims and Trauma Southern Criminology Terrorism and Counter-terrorism

Topic Children & young people in custody

Prisons from the inside PANEL – Parental and close family incarceration

ROUNDTABLE PANEL – State Recognition and Possibilities for Justice: Gender, Identity, and Victimisation

Cybercrime victimisation Family and Intimate Partner Violence

Southern and comparative criminology

Terrorism and Counter-terrorism

Session Chair Claire Loughnan Elaine Genders Catherine Flynn Murray Lee Karen Joe Laidler Helen Patterson Ruth Liston Miranda Forsyth, Max Travers Tony Krone

08:45 – 09:05 The Lives and Adjustment Patterns of Juvenile “Lifers”Simone Deegan

Just Time: Delivering the Circle of Security Parent DVD Program® in the Mary Hutchinson Women’s PrisonRosalie Martin

How do mothers ‘do time’? – Understanding variation in mothers’ experiences of imprisonmentRebecca Wallis

Crime and Justice in Digital SocietyMurray Lee, Anastasia Powell, Robin Cameron, Carolyn McKay, Greg Stratton

Identities beyond conflict: Rights, recognition, and reconciliation within Myanmar’s post-conflict justice agendaBethia Burgess

Digital Predictions: Putting Cybercrime Victimization Theories to the TestCaitlyn McGeer

Prosecutions of controlling or coercive behaviour in England and WalesPaul McGorrery, Marilyn McMahon

Applying Social Bond Theory in China: Conceptual and Operational IssuesSpencer Li

Experiences using a variety of recruitment techniques to conduct public surveys about counter-terrorismClaire Irvine

09:05 – 09:25 Psycho-educational prospects for students in custodyTim Corcoran

Procedural justice and motivational posturing: Understanding prisoners’ cooperation and compliance behavioursJulie Barkworth

Challenges and benefits of gradual release programs for the wellbeing of children of prisonersHolly Smallbone

State Recognition, Ontological Justice, and Transgender ChildrenMatthew Mitchell

Exploring notions of “justice” for individual fraud victims from those across the fraud justice networkCassandra Cross

Parental abuse by dependent adult children: An emerging form of family violence? Gemma Hamilton

Making Crime a Development Issue: UNODC and the SDGJarrett Blaustein

Understanding drivers of punitive attitudes towards counter-terrorism measures: An experimental vignette studyHarley Williamson

09:25 – 09:45 Improving the management of young people with Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder and other brain impairments in an Australian detention centreHayley Passmore

Keeping the faith in GodzoneMarilyn Chetty

“Prison journeys” – Exploring the distances between prisons and prisoners’ family membersKirsten Besemer

De-constructing the ‘Legitimate’ War VictimRashaam Chowdhury

Image Based Sexual Abuse in SingaporeLaura Vitis

Gendered entitlement or generally violent? Predictors of homicide offending by victim- offender relationshipSamara McPhedran

Implementation and Coordination of Social Crime Prevention: A Challenge for Municipalities in South AfricaThompho Tshivase

The Abbott Government response to Islamic State and Ebola: a moral panic?Matthew Box

09:45 – 10:05 Developing Diversionary Pathways for Indigenous Youth with Foetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorders (FASD): A Three Community Study in WAHarry Blagg, Tamara Tulich

Supporting First Nations families with a parent in prison: the experience of Belonging to FamilyKrystal Lockwood

Desistance from and Persistence in Male Offending: The Case of South KoreaTrent Bax

The Death of the Freedom Fighter – How the Threat of Terrorism is Suffocating the Protection of Political CriminalsJulia Jansson

10:05 – 10:25 Adult onset offending (Qld and Dutch data)Carleen Thompson

Discrete spatial choice approach to analyzing terrorist target selection Zoe Marchment

Page 14: ANZSOC 2018 has gone mobile! · THE UNIVERSITY OF MELBOURNE #ANZSOC2018 Get the app on your mobile device now, for free. 1 2 3 ACIPC 2018 Conference November 19 - November 21, 2018

26 31ST ANNUAL AUSTRALIAN AND NEW ZEALAND SOCIETY OF CRIMINOLOGY CONFERENCE ENCOUNTERING CRIME: DOING JUSTICE | 4 – 7 DECEMBER 2018 | THE UNIVERSITY OF MELBOURNE 27

10:25 – 10:55 Morning Tea Arts West Ground Floor Atrium Morning Tea Arts West Ground Floor Atrium

Room Old Arts 122 (PLT) Old Arts – 103 (Theatre A) Old Arts – 124 (Theatre C) Old Arts – 224 (Sth Theatre) Old Arts – 155 (Theatre D) Old Arts – 257 (CLS2) Old Arts – 263 (CLS1) Arts West North Wing – 355

Stream Young People, Crime and Justice Gender and Crime NGOs and Crime Policing Policing Unlawful Migrant Labour Teaching Criminology Gender and Crime

Topic Changes in ‘youth crime’ – perceptions and realities

Sex, bodies, violence PANEL – Non-governmental and voluntary sector organisations in criminal justice and drug policy processes

Policing mental illness Getting the evidence: Police interviewing practices

PANEL – Modern Slavery in Australia: exploring the limits & challenges of law

Teaching Criminology PANEL – A closed mouth catches no flies: How tertiary prevention of sexual violence and abuse can inform primary and secondary prevention

Session Chair Faith Gordon Nicola Henry Nesam McMillan Kelly Hine Georgina Heydon Karen Joe Laidler Anita McKay Juliet Rogers

10:55 – 11:15 Why is juvenile crime declining in Japan and in the other western countries?Koichi Hamai

Public Feminist Criminologies: Activist-Scholars in Violence Against Women PolicyRuth Liston

Challenges to the participation of non-government organisations in drug policy processesNatalie Thomas

Mental health and deaths after police contact in the United StatesDavid Baker

The association between offence type and frontline police trainee interviewing performance.Hamida Zekiroski

Unlawful migrant labour exploitation in AustraliaMarie Segrave

Fragmentation in criminology and criminal justice: A threshold concepts perspectiveKerry Wimshurst

Adopting a public health approach to sexual violence and abuse preventionLarissa Christensen, Susan Rayment-McHugh, Nadine McKillop

11:15 – 11:35 Pathways to offending for young Sudanese AustraliansStephane Shepherd

No Exit? Sex work, ‘exiting’ ideologies and transitioning programs in AustraliaLarissa Sandy

Valued, independent organisations or ‘little fingers of the state’?: The position and influence of NGOs in criminal justice in New ZealandAlice Mills

Police interactions with people with a mental illness: a review of the literatureDuncan Chappell

Police use of interpreters in routine cases: Challenges and innovative solutionsLoene Howes

Forced Marriage: interrogation the Australian responseLaura Vidal

University students studying alongside incarcerated men/women behind prison wallsMarietta Martinovic

Extending contextual clinical interventions with youth sexual offenders to primary and secondary prevention: An Australian case studySusan Rayment-McHugh

11:35 – 11:55 Harm goes Mainstream: The Terror of LeisureLeanne Mcrae

Communicative Consent as Law: Problems and PossibilitiesRachael Burgin

The voluntary sector in prisons in England and Wales: Where are we and what lies ahead?Rosie Meek

Therapeutic Policing and Persons with Mental Illness: Utilising Specialised Response ModelsHelen Punter

False confessions in Australian Wrongful ConvictionsLisanne Adam

The Modern Slavery Act: limits and possibilitiesHeather Moore

University’s way of writing is nothing like it was like in schools’: Embedding academic skills in first year criminologyRebecca Hiscock

Reconceptualising the role of guardianship in preventing child sexual abuseNadine McKillop

11:55 – 12:15 Young People and the Media in a Post-Conflict Society: Challenging Stereotypes and ‘Risking’ RetributionFaith Gordon

The development of a new response to pro-lifers outside abortion providing premisesDavid Vakalis

Working with, against or through neoliberal penality? Voluntary sector futures in criminal justiceMary Corcoran

Measuring the Effectiveness of Policing Practice in Fixated Individuals with Mental Illness.Emily Corner

Teaching Criminology and Social Justice in the context of student mobility and internationalised higher educationJames Roffee, Kate Burns

Professionals’ perceptions of female child sexual offenders: Implications for preventionLarissa Christensen

12:15 – 13:15 Lunch and Exhibition Arts West Ground Floor Atrium Lunch and Exhibition Arts West Ground Floor Atrium

Page 15: ANZSOC 2018 has gone mobile! · THE UNIVERSITY OF MELBOURNE #ANZSOC2018 Get the app on your mobile device now, for free. 1 2 3 ACIPC 2018 Conference November 19 - November 21, 2018

28 31ST ANNUAL AUSTRALIAN AND NEW ZEALAND SOCIETY OF CRIMINOLOGY CONFERENCE ENCOUNTERING CRIME: DOING JUSTICE | 4 – 7 DECEMBER 2018 | THE UNIVERSITY OF MELBOURNE 29

Room Old Arts 122 (PLT) Old Arts – 103 (Theatre A) Old Arts – 129 (Theatre B) Old Arts – 224 (South Theatre)

Stream Extending Punishment Extending Punishment Sentencing Victims and Trauma

Topic Highlighting harm and resisting incarceration PANEL – The Rehabilitative Prison: an oxymoron, or an opportunity to design prisons differently and reduce reoffending?

PANEL – Judicial Supervision: Evidence, current practice, and implications for mainstream court settings

Institutions of Harm and Victimisation

Session Chair Miranda Forsyth Diana Johns Stuart Ross Dave McDonald

13:15 – 13:35 Turning a spotlight on the surging number of incarcerated Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander women in VictoriaUna Stone

The moral ambiguities at the heart of progressive prison designYvonne Jewkes

A systematic review and meta-analysis of the effects of judicial supervision on recidivism, health, lifestyle factors of criminal offendersMichael Trood

Ritual Abuse and Organisational Accountability in Australian Fire ServicesTamika Perrott

13:35 – 13:55 Whatever happened to ‘Prison as a Last Resort’? Time now to consider the path towards abolition!Peter Norden

Briefing prison design in a risk-averse environmentKavan Applegate

Victorian Magistrates perceptions and use of judicial supervision in mainstream settingsBenjamin Spivak

“I’ll get you before you get me”: How people in prison understand the relationship between experiences of trauma and offendingMarianne Bevan

13:55 – 14:15 Dreaming Inside: Perspectives on a creative writing program for Aboriginal men in prisonNatalia Hanley, Elena Marchetti

Daring to be different? Creating a new, large, rehabilitative prisonKate Gooch

Judicial Supervision of Criminal Offenders: Implications for practicePauline Spencer

The Trauma of Out-Of-Home-Care: the criminogenic consequences of, and institutional responses to, care-related abuse and neglect.Kath McFarlane

Room Old Arts 122 (Public Lecture Theatre)

Stream Plenary

Session Chair Fiona Haines & Diana Johns

14:20 – 14:30 Award Presentations: » Allan Austin Bartholomew Award, Presented by James Oleson » David Biles Correctional Research Award, Presented by Dr Russell Smith » Allan van Zyl Memorial Prize, Presented by Karen Heenan

14:30 – 15:30 Keynote Address – Transformative Justice and New Abolition in the United StatesProfessor Michelle Brown

From 15:30 Ice Cream Social Arts West Ground Floor Atrium

Indicates Collaborative Conversation Session

Page 16: ANZSOC 2018 has gone mobile! · THE UNIVERSITY OF MELBOURNE #ANZSOC2018 Get the app on your mobile device now, for free. 1 2 3 ACIPC 2018 Conference November 19 - November 21, 2018

30 31ST ANNUAL AUSTRALIAN AND NEW ZEALAND SOCIETY OF CRIMINOLOGY CONFERENCE ENCOUNTERING CRIME: DOING JUSTICE | 4 – 7 DECEMBER 2018 | THE UNIVERSITY OF MELBOURNE 31

Notes

JUSTICE REIMAGINED: THE INTERSECTION BETWEEN ACADEMIA, GOVERNMENT, INDUSTRY AND THE COMMUNITY10-13 DECEMBER 2019 | PERTH CONVENTION AND EXHIBITION CENTREHOSTED BY THE UNIVERSITY OF WESTERN AUSTRALIA LAW SCHOOL

www.anzsocconference.com.au

Save the date32ND ANNUAL AUSTRALIAN AND NEW ZEALAND SOCIETY

OF CRIMINOLOGY (ANZSOC) CONFERENCE 2019

_______________________________________________________________________

_______________________________________________________________________

_______________________________________________________________________

_______________________________________________________________________

_______________________________________________________________________

_______________________________________________________________________

_______________________________________________________________________

_______________________________________________________________________

_______________________________________________________________________

_______________________________________________________________________

_______________________________________________________________________

_______________________________________________________________________

_______________________________________________________________________

_______________________________________________________________________

_______________________________________________________________________

_______________________________________________________________________

_______________________________________________________________________

_______________________________________________________________________

_______________________________________________________________________

_______________________________________________________________________

_______________________________________________________________________

_______________________________________________________________________

_______________________________________________________________________

_______________________________________________________________________

_______________________________________________________________________

_______________________________________________________________________

_______________________________________________________________________

_______________________________________________________________________

_______________________________________________________________________

_______________________________________________________________________

_______________________________________________________________________

_______________________________________________________________________

_______________________________________________________________________

_______________________________________________________________________

_______________________________________________________________________

_______________________________________________________________________

_______________________________________________________________________

_______________________________________________________________________

_______________________________________________________________________

_______________________________________________________________________

_______________________________________________________________________

_______________________________________________________________________

Page 17: ANZSOC 2018 has gone mobile! · THE UNIVERSITY OF MELBOURNE #ANZSOC2018 Get the app on your mobile device now, for free. 1 2 3 ACIPC 2018 Conference November 19 - November 21, 2018

www.anzsoc2016.com POCKET PROGRAM

#ANZSOC2018