Meeting the Challenge of Bugmy: Using Gladue-style Reports to Link the Story of the People to the Story of the Person
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Hopkins, Anthony
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The Australian National University
Abstract
The High Court decision in Bugmy (2013) was a disappointment
for those hoping for an acknowledgement of the extent to which
the criminal justice system has failed Indigenous Australians. It
was a disappointment for those who had hoped the Court might
highlight the importance of sentencing courts understanding
Indigenous offenders in the context of the experience of their
people, engaging with narratives of struggle and survival
rather than simply disadvantage. Yet, the Court confirmed the
foundational principle as stated by Brennan J in Neal (1982)
that ‘in imposing sentences, courts are bound to take into
account … all material facts including those facts which exist
only be reason of an offender’s membership of an ethnic or
other group’. The primary challenge presented by Bugmy is not
therefore one of principle. Rather, it is the burden that it casts
upon Indigenous offenders to place evidence before the Court
of the link between their individual experience and that of their
people before their group membership can be said to reveal
material facts. This burden is a weighty one and thwarts a deeper
engagement with Indigenous experience in sentencing. One way
to lighten this burden would be to adopt the Canadian initiative
of ‘Gladue Reports’: a form of Indigenous specific and authored
pre-sentence report which explains an offender’s path to
offending within the context of the experience of their people, and
points out Indigenous specific pathways to healing and reform,
where they exist.
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National Indigenous Legal Conference 2016
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