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Griffith Youth Forensic Service From treatment to prevention : Working with Queensland remote Indigenous communities Sue Rayment-McHugh Manager Griffith.

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Presentation on theme: "Griffith Youth Forensic Service From treatment to prevention : Working with Queensland remote Indigenous communities Sue Rayment-McHugh Manager Griffith."— Presentation transcript:

1 Griffith Youth Forensic Service From treatment to prevention : Working with Queensland remote Indigenous communities Sue Rayment-McHugh Manager Griffith Youth Forensic Service Griffith University Queensland

2 Griffith Youth Forensic Service  Partnership between Queensland Department of Communities (Youth Justice Program) and Griffith University’s Key Centre for Ethics, Law, Justice and Governance  State-wide field based service provision (Queensland) for youth who have been found guilty of a sexual offence  Primary office in Brisbane, satellite office in Cairns  Highest risk / needs + regional / remote referrals prioritised  Increasing involvement with youth from remote Indigenous communities  Over 300 referrals since 2001 »85% from outside Brisbane Metropolitan area »35% Indigenous youth

3 Griffith Youth Forensic Service Extending intervention with offending youth to primary and secondary prevention  GYFS core business is offender treatment – tertiary prevention »Ecological practice framework  understand youth in the context of their development, their natural ecosystem and the immediate environment in which the offence/s occurred  promotes a multi-systemic focus for assessment and treatment activities  clinical assessment - discovering why an offence occurred – which contributes to understanding of how it could have been prevented  Work within remote Indigenous communities »Provided new opportunities to extend tertiary prevention activities to primary and secondary prevention »Provision of high quality specialist services to remote communities is a significant challenge throughout Australia and internationally  geographic challenges  resource limitations  professional practice traditionally involves bringing clients to the specialist »GYFS reverses this trend and sends practitioners to the client regardless of location (field based)

4 Griffith Youth Forensic Service Extending intervention with offending youth to primary and secondary prevention cont.. »Contextual explanations for offending behaviour  State and National Inquiries highlight high rates of sexual abuse within remote Indigenous communities with primarily contextual explanations  different environmental contexts rather than increased levels of psychopathology  case specific assessments highlight situational and contextual factors as major contributors to offending behaviour »Seriously question effectiveness of working primarily at individual level – treatment unlikely to be effective without changes at community level  situational and contextual factors major focus of treatment interventions  increased understanding of offending in this context increases understanding of prevention needs »Involvement in prevention becomes increasingly clear in this context  currently limited funding / attention specific to the prevention of sexual abuse in some communities  clinical practitioners working with offenders could inform initial prevention efforts by identifying key areas of focus or contribute directly to these activities  “Bottom-up” approach to community-level sexual abuse prevention

5 Griffith Youth Forensic Service A “bottom-up” approach to prevention  Court mandate to work with individual youth and their families  Work starts with an ecological assessment and case formulation »comprehensive information about factors contributing to the offending behaviour »identification of risk and protective factors across individual, family and community systems  Collaborative treatment intervention informed by assessment »treatment targets factors identified through assessment »individually tailored treatment with focus on multi-systemic (individual, family, peer, school and community level) interventions  Information about community risk / protective factors in an individual case can directly inform broader locally-tailored prevention efforts targeting the whole community  GYFS community level interventions contribute directly to prevention

6 Griffith Youth Forensic Service GYFS Prevention Activities  Engage and collaborate with key community stakeholders (eg. elders, identified community members, agencies, paraprofessionals, professionals) to discuss issues regarding community safety, sexual offending behaviour and the prevention of sexual abuse  Facilitate workshops to specifically address issues relating to community safety and the prevention of sexual abuse (12-point Prevention Model) (Smallbone, Marshall & Wortley, 2008)  Capacity building activities: »collaborative partnerships (Smallbone, Rayment-McHugh, Crissman & Shumack, 2008) »consultation »formal training (Dadds, Smallbone, Nisbet & Dombrowski, 2003)  Direct involvement in some community specific prevention related activities (eg. assistance with community youth activities)

7 Griffith Youth Forensic Service What is the role of the clinical treatment practitioner in prevention?  Historically community focused prevention activities led by advocacy groups not clinical practitioners  Typically clinical practitioners funded / employed / trained specifically to focus on provision of treatment to identified youth and their families HOWEVER…  Specialist knowledge in this field  Specific knowledge of contributing factors on case by case (community by community) basis  Responsibility to address assessed contributing factors (including community level factors) SO…  Clinical treatment practitioners well / best placed to contribute directly to primary and secondary prevention activities

8 Griffith Youth Forensic Service Example from a Cape York community  Factors which contributed to sexual offending behaviour »limited education / guidance re appropriate sexual behaviour »peer group normalisation of underage sex »exposure to community violence »significant unstructured time »limited supervision at night »access to vulnerable children  Mapping community prevention ideas »increasing public education about safety / appropriate sexual behaviour eg. radio segments in local language, community drama / entertainment with safety focus, locally designed brochures, school based safety programs »increase availability of formal supervised pro-social recreational activities »increase supervision before / during / after community events eg. transport youth home from events, training for place managers »increase availability of counselling / support services eg. victim counselling, parent support, mens & womens groups, young parents group

9 Griffith Youth Forensic Service Prevention in remote Indigenous communities?  Common themes between communities yet also uniqueness »Northern Territory Intervention »“Bottom-Up” approach  people on the ground (local community members & professionals) directly informing and contributing to prevention activities  Communities That Care (Hawkins & Catalano, 1992; Communities That Care, 1997) »Evidence and knowledge based framework for organising prevention activities in a community / co-ordinated and targeted approach »Role for clinical practitioners  Justice Reinvestment (Calma, 2009) »Divert funds otherwise spent on imprisonment and invest in programs / services that address underlying causes of crime  Further research needed »Baseline measures »Increased understanding of sexual offending in identified contexts  What happens? Where does it happen? When does it happen? Who is involved? How does it happen? etc


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