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Pre-Conference Day
Tusday, 25 February 2024
Conference Day 1
Wednesday, 26 February 2024
Conference Day 2
Thursday, 27 February 2024
Post ConferenceWorkshop
Friday, 28 February 2024
Pre-Conference Day
Tusday, 25 February 2024

Conference Day 1
Wednesday, 26 February 2024

7:00 Registration opens
8:30 Welcome to Country
8:50 Opening remarks from the Chair

Susannah Day

Susannah Day

Chief Executive Officer
The Torch

9:10 Opening keynote Truth telling, justice reform and a better shared future
  • Understanding our colonial history in Victoria and how the past impacts today’s justice system
  • Stories from Australia’s first formal truth telling process
  • Recommendations for reform and the path to a fairer, more just future for all Victorians

Travis Lovett

Commissioner
Yoorrook Justice Commission

9:40 Cultivating resilience and tenacity and mastering challenges in the justice system

He specialised in the field of homicide investigation for 25 years, up until his retirement in 2019 with the rank of Detective Chief Inspector

  • Building strength in high-stakes investigations and the crucial role of tenacity in overcoming obstacles and achieving success in complex cases
  • How aligning your passion with a broader perspective enhances decision-making and drives effective problem-solving
  • Implementing strategies for sustaining motivation amid challenges and turning setbacks into opportunities for growth

Gary Jubelin

Former Detective Chief Inspector

10:10 Panel discussion Utilising data for justice through a community-driven model for reinvestment and reconciliation
  • How robust data and research will result in effective justice reinvestment strategies that prioritise localised needs
  • Overcoming challenges in analysing the data to suit community-led justice models
  • Implementing methods for involving community members and local organisations in data collection and analysis to ensure solutions are truly reflective of community priorities

Panellist:

Ian Brown

Community Data Manager
Justice Reinvest NSW

Rachel Harris

First Nations Strategy and Impact Lead
NEAMI National

10:50 Morning Refreshment Sponsor

Supporting First Nations people with disability in the Justice System

Insights and FAQ guide by Yarning Crescent 

Tamara Lovett

State Manager (Victoria) – Aboriginal Disability and Justice Support
Yarning Crescent

10:55 Morning Refreshments

Tackling the root causes through prevention, intervention and diversion programs

Chair:
John Lawrence

John B. Lawrence SC

Barrister
James Muirhead Chambers

11:20 Case study Powering change through curiosity and actions for social transformation in justice
  •  How small actions combined with bold ideas can unlock the potential for transformative change
  • Applying the power take off (PTO) philosophy to drive impactful, sustainable change in communities
  • Exploring real-world examples of initiatives driven by curiosity and action to develop diverse projects that contribute to large-scale change in justice transformation

Benjamin Knight

Co-founder
A Curious Tractor

Nicholas Marchesi

Co-founder
A Curious Tractor

11:50 Analysing the detrimental effects of delayed justice, re-traumatisation, systemic failure and pathways to reform
  • Exploring how extended timelines and systemic backlogs re-traumatise victims, prolonging their emotional and psychological suffering and hindering their healing process
  • Overcoming systemic challenges and inequities of how the clogged justice system disproportionately disadvantages victims, leaving them feeling powerless, neglected and often disillusioned with the process.
  • Implementing a victim-centred justice reforms strategy to prioritise timely resolution, embrace a trauma-informed approach and ensure a more compassionate and supportive system for victims seeking justice

Graeme Simpfendorfer

Former Detective Sergeant
Director
Peregrine Consultancy
Director
Centre Against Violence
Lead Investigator
‘Hunted Australia

12:20 Mindfulness session
12:30 Case study Enhancing justice support through collaborative partnerships for improved access to justice services
  • How collaboration between specialist organisations and mainstream entities can combine resources and expertise to improve service delivery for individuals seeking justice support
  • Embedding specialist workers within mainstream organisations to enhance staff capabilities and foster a trauma-informed approach to justice support
  • Creating sustainable pathways for developing long-term partnerships that ensure continued access to justice support services and address the evolving needs of underserved communities

Kelly Parker

Manager – Reintegration Housing Support Program
Community Restorative Centre

1:00 Networking luncheon
2:00 Case study Analysing innovative legal solutions and strategies to provide more effective legal aid services for culturally appropriate advocacy and representation
  • How to overcome the legal barriers and challenges related to discrimination and over-representation in the justice system
  • Analysing innovative legal solutions and strategies for providing more effective legal aid services for culturally appropriate advocacy and representation
  • Implementing policy reform and systemic change to influence legal reform and address systemic inequities within the justice system

Corina Martin

Chief Executive Officer
Aboriginal Family Law Services
*Virtual presentation

2:30 Case study Building a future where Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children get the support they deserve
  • Discussing the progress and setbacks of the campaign to raise the minimum age of criminal responsibility
  • Showcasing path forward to end the overpolicing and overincarceration of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children
  • What a future looks like for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children when they get the support they deserve

Nerita Wright

Chief Executive Officer
Victorian Aboriginal Legal Service (VALS)

3:00 How Indigenous justice is at the mercy of a collapsing system
  • Tackling systemic failures that undermine Indigenous justice systems and increase vulnerabilities within a collapsing framework

  • Drawing on traditional practices and cultural knowledge to adapt and strengthen justice mechanisms despite external pressures

  • Designing collaborative efforts to reform existing systems and elevate Indigenous voices in the pursuit of equitable justice

John Lawrence

John B. Lawrence SC

Barrister
James Muirhead Chambers

Supporting young people to break the cycle of recidivism in the justice system

Chair:

Dwayne Antojado

Senior Advocacy, Research and Policy Officer
Community Restorative Centre

11:20 Fireside chat Showcasing cultural and economic self-determination to create new pathways beyond the criminal legal system
  • Hear from The Torch in community artists about how access to cultural self-determination strengthens identity, resilience, and provides a sense of belonging and purpose
  • How The Torch developed strategies to offer economic independence through the arts and cultural sectors
  • Exploring how combining cultural empowerment with economic self-determination creates sustainable pathways, reducing recidivism and improving overall wellbeing

Moderator:
Susannah Day

Susannah Day

Chief Executive Officer
The Torch

Panellists:

Flick Chafer-Smith

The Torch

Tupun Wultatinyeri

The Torch

11:50 Case study Implementing comprehensive strategies to provide young people with holistic cultural safety support
  • Developing a culturally responsive and community-based intervention program to promote long-term positive outcomes for young people
  • Integrating a multi-sector solution to create comprehensive support networks to address individualised assistance
  • Developing preventative measure and support systems for youth to access every step of the way

Sasha Greenoff

Manager (state-wide) Youth Engagement Program
Aboriginal Legal Services – WA

12:20 Mindfulness session
12:30 Case study Transforming healing by implementing innovative justice approaches in Koori youth services
  • Addressing justice through an integrated holistic model of care for youth support
  • Focusing on advocacy in a Koori youth healing service for improved outcomes
  • Piloting restorative justice practice in a residential context

Peter Dawson

Clinical Lead and Co Manager
Bunjilwarra

Uncle Patrick Farrant

Cultural Lead
Bunjilwarra

1:00 Networking luncheon
2:00 Panel discussion Building strategies for peer support post incarceration and finding purpose through those with lived experience
  • Developing a model that helps build connect and support and finding your tribe
  • How to make impactful changes through volunteering and identification
  • Showcasing the strength of collective action and the power of lived experience

Moderator:

Stu Holmes

Founder
The Green Collar

Panellists:

Nadja Basic

Ex WISE UP Coordinator
WISE Employment

Paul Hunter

Manager
Green Collar Brigade

Luke Anderson

Founder
Fair Threads

2:30 Case study Breaking down barriers to employment post incarceration
  • Identifying and discussing barriers to employment post incarceration and ways to break them down
  • Developing strategies for throughcare and wrap around services and partnerships
  • Examining the importance of employment to kick start reintegration

Lukas Carey

Lukas Carey

Education and Advocacy Manager
Reboot Australia

3:00 Breaking the cycle of recidivism through healing, wellbeing and cultural connection
  • Recognising at-risk youth and identifying early warning signs and risk factors that indicate youth may enter the justice system, enabling timely intervention
  • Brain Health and Healing as a solution in addressing juvenile delinquency and fostering positive outcomes
  • Implementing community-based holistic support strategies that empower at-risk youth and facilitate smoother transitions to eduation, training and employment.

Sheryl Batchelor

Sheryl Batchelor

Founder and Director
Yiliyapinya
*Virtual presentation

3:30 Afternoon refreshments
4:00 Mini workshop Supporting Indigenous young people transitioning back into society through a community reintegration model

This mini workshop will deep dive into the complex journey of youth reentering society after incarceration. Delegates will gain insights into the obstacles these young individuals encounter as they strive to rebuild their lives, including finding stable housing and securing employment. The session will highlight effective services and resources that play a critical role in easing this transition and will provide strategies for creating robust community networks that offer ongoing support and guidance.

Prepare to learn strategies on:

  • How to overcome the common challenges Indigenous youth face when reintegrating into their communities post-incarceration
  • Ensuring accessible support services and resources that can aid in successful reintegration, such as housing and employment support
  • Establishing and leveraging community networks to support youth during their transition

Lukas Williams

Founder
Gaa’na Healing

Jacob Little

Co-Founder
About Time for Justice

5:00 Closing remarks from the Chair and end of conference day one
  • Analysing the key findings and insights from the National Children’s Commissioner’s report, highlighting the urgent need for systemic changes to improve outcomes for at-risk youth
  • Focusing on the critical role of early intervention in the child justice system and how it can prevent harm while promoting safety and wellbeing for children
  • Developing innovative, community-driven approaches that can be implemented to transform child justice practices and foster a supportive environment for children and families
6:30 Networking dinner

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Conference Day 2
Thursday, 27 February 2024

8:00 Registration opens
8:50 Opening remarks from the Chair

Susannah Day

Susannah Day

Chief Executive Officer
The Torch

9:10 keynote Breaking down intergenerational incarceration and lessons from personal experience
  • Unveiling the journey of youth detention and the challenges of turning 18 in custody, illustrating the impact of intergenerational incarceration on individuals and families
  • Identifying systemic failures in the criminal justice system and exploring systemic issues that perpetuate cycles of trauma and incarceration
  • Prioritising vital services that service providers need to be aware of, equipping them to better support affected individuals and communities

Jacob Little

Co-Founder
About Time for Justice

9:30 Showcasing what a successful cross-sector partnership should include for long-term outcomes

• Setting strong foundations that lead to thriving partnerships
• Co-designing priorities that are built around self-determination

Aunty Marion Hansen

Founding member
Ngwala Willumbong Aborigina

Chris Harrison

Co-Chair
Aboriginal Justice Caucus and Chair, Aboriginal Community Justice Panel (ACJP)

Adrian Sculthorpe

Deputy Secretary Aboriginal Justice Group
Department of Justice and Community Safety

10:10 Fireside chat Revolutionising justice and embracing rehabilitation over punishmen

John Killick is an Australian criminal and author. He is best known for escaping from Sydney’s Silverwater Correctional Complex with his partner by helicopter on 25 March 1999.

  • Talking through personal experience in the justice system from 1960 to the present and highlighting key ongoing changes
  • Examining the impact of drug-related issues on the justice system and the urgent need for reform in addressing addiction
  • Analysing the financial implications of rehabilitation programs compared to punitive measures to explore sustainable solutions for effective justice

John Killick

Australian Author and Advocate

10:40 Morning refreshments

Expanding impact and scaling restorative programs across communities and organisations

Chair:

Dwayne Antojado

Senior Advocacy, Research and Policy Officer
Community Restorative Centre

11:10 Driving systemic change through family-led advocacy, grounded in justice, accountability and healing
  • How family led advocacy and centering lived experiences leads to meaningful change and systemic reform
  • Working collectively with grassroots communities and families to mobilise and strengthen campaigns, ensuring the best outcomes for the family and honoring the person who died in custody
  • Empowering families to engage in both advocacy and restorative processes on their own terms, ensuring the outcomes genuinely reflect their voices and priorities for healing, justice and accountability

Apryl Day

Founder
Dwadjowa Foundation

11:50 Case study How to utilise the Bugmy Bar Book as an evidence-based resource to strengthen legal advocacy through informed, culturally sensitive approaches
  • Providing more equitable and just outcomes for people involved in the criminal legal system
  • Addressing the root causes of becoming involved in the justice sector
  • Analysing this resource as a tool for supporting therapeutic options for people in the legal sector

Damian Beaufils

First Nations Crown Prosecutor
NSW Office of the Director of Public Prosecutions

Josh Brock

Public Defenderr
NSW Public Defenders

12:30 Networking luncheon
1:30 Case study Emphasising the pivotal role of Elders and community involvement in addressing crime and care through initiatives like the Youth Koori Court (NSW) and the Dubbo Winha-nga-nha list
  • Exploring how therapeutic courts operate and focusing on holistic approaches to address the needs of offenders
  • Assessing specific risk factors that are faced by individuals, such as trauma, addiction, or mental illness to promote positive behavioral changes and reduce recidivism
  • Co-designing with input from community members, health professionals and legal experts to ensure the interventions are culturally appropriate and around the individual’s needs

Her Honour Sue Duncombe

Magistrate
Children’s Court of NSW

2:10 Mindfulness session
2:20 Case study Promoting positive men’s behavioural change with culturally informed approaches to reduce violence without punitive measures
  • Holding men accountable for their actions through culturally appropriate, non-punitive interventions that focus on responsibility and rehabilitation rather than punishment
  • How Indigenous cultural practices can be used to change harmful behaviours toward women, focusing on community-driven support, respect, and healing
  • Developing strategies for lasting behavioral change by focusing on education, cultural values to reduce violence through community involvement

David Batty

David Batty

Men’s Behaviors Change Coordinator
Geraldton Regional Aboriginal Medical Service (GRAMS)

Empowering communities to accelerate justice outcomes with reinvestment

Chair:
Susannah Day

Dwayne Antojado

Chief Executive Officer
The Torch

11:10 Case study Co-designing justice innovation with young people and community leaders on Larrakia Land
  • Creating the conditions for cross-cultural research partnerships on Larrakia Land
  • Undertaking research with young people who have had contact with justice systems
  • Examining findings and community-based solutions for strengthening young peoples’ wellbeing Where to now? How local community leaders are using these findings Co-designing justice innovation with young people and community leaders on Larrakia Land
11:50 How partnerships between reintegration services and First Nations organisations support First Nations people returning home from prison and communities
  • Co-designing the Vacro and Mallee District Aboriginal Services (MDAS) partnership to deliver the ReConnect program in the Mallee region
  • Reflections on the learning journey undertaken by both services
  • What the future looks like for participants, staff, the organisations and our community – together we will rise, heal and thrive!

Sarah Hughes

ReConnect Program Manager
Vacro

Terry Brennan

ReConnect Case Manager
Mallee District Aboriginal Services (MDAS)

12:30 Networking luncheon
1:30 Overcoming barriers to scaling restorative justice in Indigenous communities
  • Identifying common obstacles in expanding restorative justice programs
  • Developing strategies to build trust and gain buy-in from local communities and stakeholders
  • Exploring how community driven restorative initiatives have transformed justice processes for Indigenous people and communities

Geoffrey Scott

Chief Executive Officer
Just Reinvest NSW

2:10 Mindfulness session
2:20 Case study Keeping communities safe and the role of public intoxication response services
  • How outreach and sobering services help prevent individuals from entering the justice system by addressing public intoxication with care and compassion
  • Delivering specialised services designed for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander individuals, offering culturally appropriate responses to public intoxication
  • Implementing a framework for intake, referral and dispatch services operate across the state to provide real-time support

Danny Jeffcote

Outreach Cluster Lead, Public Intoxication Response Service
Cohealth

3:30 Case study Healing violence through Social and Emotional Wellbeing
  • Co-creating healing journeys to stop violence, build self-determination and sustainability
  • Addressing the use of violence within individuals, families and kinship
  • Developing strategies for innovation, healing and sustainability
  • Clinton Bennell, Strategy, Policy and Partnership Lead, First Nations Healing

4:00 Keynote Help way earlier – Transforming child justice and a call for early intervention to enhance safety and wellbeing in Australia
  • Analysing the key findings and insights from the National Children’s Commissioner’s report, highlighting the urgent need for systemic changes to improve outcomes for at-risk youth
  • Focusing on the critical role of early intervention in the child justice system and how it can prevent harm while promoting safety and wellbeing for children
  • Developing innovative, community-driven approaches that can be implemented to transform child justice practices and foster a supportive environment for children and families

Anne Hollonds

National Children’s Commissioner
Australian Human Rights Commission
** Virtual Presentation

4:30 Harmony Circle

Participants will come together to yarn and share their thoughts and reflections on the day’s discussions and activities. This informal gathering encourages open dialogue and mutual learning, allowing everyone to voice their perspectives and insights.

4:50 Closing remarks from the Chair and end of day two

Post ConferenceWorkshop
Friday, 28 February 2024

9:00 – 12:00 Workshop A Building resilience through trauma-informed practices to minimise staff burnout

In this workshop, attendees will explore the critical importance of integrating trauma-informed care into justice settings to protect staff who are frequently exposed to high-stress and emotionally challenging environments. By focusing on practical tools and strategies, participants will learn how to prevent burnout, promote mental health and create a sustainable work culture.

This session will emphasise the importance of self-care and collective wellbeing to ensure that staff can continue to offer compassionate, effective services without compromising their own health.

Attend this practical workshop and learn how to:

  • Understand secondary trauma and its effect from working with trauma survivors and its impact on staff wellbeing
  • Identify signs and symptoms of burnout in the workplace
  • Create a self-care plan that is personal and team-based with strategies that promote staff wellbeing
  • Build organisational resilience: How justice institutions can implement trauma-informed policies and support systems to build organisational resilience for staff
  • Focus on the role of peer support networks and reflective supervision in mitigating burnout and secondary trauma

Facilitator:
Bruce Perhan

Bruce Perhan

Director
Let’s Talk Differently

12:00 Networking luncheon
1:00 – 4:00 Workshop B A framework for reintegration practice that de-prioritises ‘risk’ and ‘need’ in favour of ‘desistance’ and ‘capability’

The focus of this workshop is to present an innovative Reintegration Practice Framework for successful throughcare transitions from prison to community, grounded in desistance theory and the capabilities approach. Published in 2023, this framework provides Vacro’s reintegration, family and employment programs with a consistent, evidence based and person-centred approach to reintegration that offers an alternative to the historical emphasis on ‘risk’ and ‘need’ within the criminal justice sector.

This half day workshop will bring together research, policy and practice experts to outline the framework theory and evidence and speak to how to successfully use the framework in monitoring and evaluation, advocacy with government, reflective practice, professional development and supporting participants to build a life that they have reason to value in the community.

The team will provide interactive opportunities for workshop attendees on how the framework might apply in their organisation and a step-by-step guide to developing a new framework of community reintegration for their organisation.

Attend this practical workshop and learn about:

  • Developing a purpose-built, evidence-based framework for reintegration
  • Building a specialist structure that bring consistency, validates the role of community services within the justice space and brings the person into view
  • Having desistance-based conversations with participants
  • Assembling a framework that acts as an enabler of high-level advocacy
  • Building a pathway to establishing a reintegration framework within your organisation

Facilitators:

Dr Aaron Hart

Strategic Research and Evaluation Designer
Vacro

Dr Abigail Lewis

Senior Policy and Advocacy Advisor
Vacro

Sarah Hughes

ReConnect Program Manager
Vacro

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