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Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Victorians. What does the data tell us? How does this impact on VALS’ future directions?. Victoria’s Aboriginal population is young and growing fast….
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Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Victorians What does the data tell us? How does this impact on VALS’ future directions?
Victoria’s Aboriginal population is young and growing fast… • Victoria’s recorded Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander population was 37,988 people out of a total Victorian population of 5,354,042. This equates to 0.7% of the population. • Nationally the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander population is 2.5% of the total population. • 6.9% of the nation’s ATSI people live in Victoria • ABS CENSUS 2011
A population that is younger and growing faster than the general community
Victoria’s Aboriginal young people • The Victorian Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander population has a younger age distribution than the non-Indigenous population with a median age of 21 years in the 2011 Census, compared with 38 years for non-Indigenous people. • More than one in three Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders are under 15 years of age.
Victoria’s Aboriginal population is growing fast • Victoria’s ATSI population increased by 7,848 since the 2006 census • This is a growth rate of 4.7% per annum, compared to a growth rate of 1.7% for Victoria’s general population. • …and an increase of 26% since the 2006 census, a rate of growth exceeded only by the ACT. • Note preliminary estimates adjusted for undercount indicate the ATSI population might be as high as 47,327. Final figures will be available in 2014.
Where do Aboriginal Victorian’s live? • 53.7% live in regional areas, 46.3% in metro areas. • The distribution of the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander population across Victoria is quite uneven, with relatively higher numbers of Aboriginal people living in a small number of local government areas.
LGAs with the greatest number of Aboriginal people • Greater Shepparton- 2082 • Mildura- 1836 • Greater Geelong- 1788 • Greater Bendigo- 1441 • Casey- 1403 • East Gippsland- 1353 • Darebin- 1156 • Wyndham- 1144 • Ballarat- 1140 • Whittlesea-1125 • Latrobe- 1055 • Hume- 1046
Aboriginal populations in key centres in Greater Melbourne Metropolitan area, 2011
Over- representation in prison Victoria has performed well, but trending up
Aboriginal Victorians are 12.5 times as likely to be in prison ABS: Prisoners in Australia, 2012 (cat. no. 4517.0).
Largest proportional increase in ATSI imprisonment rate was found in Victoria (15%) Average daily ATSI imprisonment rate ABS: - Corrective Services, Australia, March Quarter 2013 (CAT NO 4512.0)
Key trends in Victoria which may have contributed to improved Koori justice outcomes between 2005 and 2011 have been: • In 2002, 31.8% of Koori Victorians reported having used substances in the last 12 months. By 2008 this had reduced to 27.5% • Koori labour force participation in Victoria has risen from 56.9% in 2006 to 66.3% in 2010 • Attendance at social activities, sporting and physical recreation activities and cultural activities have improved amongst Koori Victorians, by 1%, 13% and 13% respectively. • School retention from year 7 to 12 has increased from 38.4% in 2006 to 46.9% in 2011 plus many Victorian Indigenous students also enrolled in TAFE courses • In2012 37.7% of Aboriginal students in Year 12 went on to university compared to 27.7% in 2006. Key trends in Victoria that may have negatively impacted Koori justice outcomes: • Risky/high risk alcohol use in the Victorian Koori community rose from 33.8% in 2002 to 39% in 2008 • Koori unemployment in Victoria has risen from 15.8% in 2006 to 16.3% in 2010, although this is explained by rising labour force participation. • Most Koories overall have completed part Secondary schooling only: 91.3% of males and 85% of females. • Child protection substations increased from 56.6 per 1000 children in 2006 to 62.5 in 2012
VALS’ clients – numbers and trends • Assistance • Casework • Criminal, Civil and Family • Location • Age and gender breakdown
Concluding points • The Aboriginal population is proportionally small when compared to the total Victorian population, but growing at a faster rate • Aboriginal Victorians are more likely to live in regional Victoria that non-Aboriginal Victorians • Population is young and it is young people who are more likely to have contact with the justice system • The rate of imprisonment has grown 15%, the highest in the country in the year to March 2013 • Non-metropolitan regions have seen increases in the proportion of Koories that were sentenced to community based orders compared to prison. However, the reverse occurred in large metropolitan regions what year • Indigenous males in custody increased 7% and females 12% in the year to March 2013 • The rate of imprisonment for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander prisoners nationally was 15 times higher than the rate for non-Indigenous prisoners at 30 June 2012; Victoria 12.5 times higher. • Risky/high risk alcohol use in the Victorian Koori community rose from 33.8% in 2002 to 39% in 2008 • Aboriginal young people are far more likely to be remanded – 30% compared to 22%