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‘Cemented in their cells’: a human rights analysis of Blessington, Elliott and the life imprisonment of children in New South Wales

Version 2 2024-06-03, 22:02
Version 1 2016-01-01, 00:00
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-03, 22:02 authored by Wendy O'BrienWendy O'Brien, K Fitz-Gibbon
In 2010, two Australians, convicted in childhood of rape and murder, lodged a joint submission with the United Nations Human Rights Committee, claiming that successive changes to sentencing legislation in New South Wales breached their human rights by denying them any meaningful prospect of release. In this article, we examine the political, legislative and procedural moves that have resulted in Australian children being sentenced to life without parole or release. We argue that successive legislative changes in various Australian jurisdictions have resulted in a framework for sentencing decisions that is considerably out of step with international legal standards for criminal justice. These increasingly punitive legislative changes exacerbate Australia’s already declining record of cooperation with UN processes, and reveal Australia’s reluctance to respect the legitimacy and authority of international law. Against this troubling context, the views of the Human Rights Committee serve as a much-needed reminder about the importance of a principled approach to child sentencing that forecloses neither the goal of rehabilitation nor the prospect of release and reintegration.

History

Related Materials

Location

London, Eng.

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2016, Taylor & Francis

Journal

Australian journal of human rights

Volume

22

Pagination

111-133

ISSN

1323-238X

Issue

1

Publisher

Taylor & Francis