1 | Juvenile Justice Client file cluster |
|
| |
1 | Person identifier | String
[20]
| XXXXXX[X(14)]
A logical combination of valid alphanumeric characters that identify an entity. | DSS specific information: A State or Territory identifier should be the first character of the person identifier according to the following: 1 | New South Wales | 2 | Victoria |
3 | Queensland | 4 | South Australia | 5 | Western Australia | 6 | Tasmania | 7 | Northern Territory | 8 | Australian Capital Territory | 9 | Other territories (e.g. Christmas Island) |
|
2 | Letters of family name | String
[3]
| XXX A combination of alphanumeric characters. | |
3 | Letters of given name | String
[2]
| XX A combination of alphanumeric characters. | |
4 | Date of birth | Date/Time
[8]
| DDMMYYYY
The day of a particular month and year. | DSS specific information: The young person should be aged 10–25 years at the order start date. The young person should be aged 10–25 years at the detention start date. |
5 | Sex | Number
[1]
| 1 | Male | 2 | Female | 3 | Intersex or indeterminate | 9 | Not stated/inadequately described |
| |
6 | Indigenous status | Number
[1]
| 1 | Aboriginal but not Torres Strait Islander origin | 2 | Torres Strait Islander but not Aboriginal origin | 3 | Both Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander origin | 4 | Neither Aboriginal nor Torres Strait Islander origin | 9 | Not stated/inadequately described |
| |
7 | First service contact date | Date/Time
[8]
| DDMMYYYY
The day of a particular month and year. | DSS specific information: This Data Element is used in the Juvenile Justice Client file, as the date on which the person was first supervised or case managed by the juvenile justice department. The date can be before the start of the NMDS (i.e. 1/7/00). If the first service contact date is unknown, leave the field blank. Business rules The date must be before or equal to the earliest order entry date in the JJ NMDS. The young person's age at the first service contact date (calculated using DOB) should be at least 10 years. Merge rules If the young person’s first service contact date has changed between previous extracts and the current extract, the latest first service contact date will be recorded. |
2 | Juvenile Justice Order file cluster |
|
| |
1 | Person identifier | String
[20]
| XXXXXX[X(14)]
A logical combination of valid alphanumeric characters that identify an entity. | DSS specific information: The person identifier is a jurisdictionally-specific code that uniquely identifies a young person (youth justice client) within the State or Territory youth justice department responsible for the young person. A State or Territory identifier should be the first character of the person identifier according to the following: 1 New South Wales 2 Victoria 3 Queensland 4 South Australia 5 Western Australia 6 Tasmania 7 Northern Territory 8 Australian Capital Territory 9 Other territories (e.g. Christmas Island) |
2 | Order identifier | String
[50]
| X[X(49)]
A combination of alphanumeric characters that identify an object or entity. | DSS specific information: For the purposes of the Juvenile Justice NMDS, this unique identifier is retained across collection periods. The identifier is assigned by the State or Territory youth justice department. In the order file, the order identifier will in most cases be unique. However, where a single order specifies multiple types of supervision, for example a blended order that specifies a period in detention followed by a period of community-based supervision, the information relating to each type of supervision will comprise a separate record but the order identifier will remain the same. In the example below, order #10001 is a blended order that comprises a period in detention from 1/1/08 to 1/6/08 followed by a period in the community from 1/6/08 to 1/12/08. Order #10002 is an unrelated remand order. Person identifier | Order identifier | Order start date | Order end date | Order type-national | Order end reason | Comment | 1 | 10001 | 01/01/08 | 01/06/08 | 35 (sentenced detention) | completed | blended order part 1 | 1 | 10001 | 01/06/08 | 01/12/08 | 31 (sentenced community-based with or without additional mandated requirements) | completed | blended order part 2 | 1 | 10002 | 15/01/09 | 20/01/09 | 21 (remand) | completed | unrelated order |
Queensland: Don't count detention orders that are followed by a period of supervised release as blended orders. Business rules - If the order identifier matches the order identifier of another record and the person identifiers are the same, the order end date of the first record should equal the order start date of the second record.
- The order identifier (charge file) must be in the order file.
- If the order type (order file) is an unsentenced order then there must be a record in the charge file with a matching order ID.
- The order identifier (offence file) must be in the order file.
|
3 | Order start date | Date/Time
[8]
| DDMMYYYY
The day of a particular month and year. | DSS specific information: Guide for use This date may not necessarily be the date that supervision began; for example, if a sentence of detention is backdated to the start of the young person’s remand period, the order start date will be before the period of sentenced detention actually began. Orders may be concurrent and overlap; that is, the order start date may be before the order end date of the previous order. The order start date is the date the order first comes into effect, which may not necessarily be the same as the date the court handed down the order. Orders that are handed down by a court to take effect in the future should not be backdated to the date they were handed down. Business rules |
4 | Order end date | Date/Time
[8]
| DDMMYYYY
The day of a particular month and year. | DSS specific information: Guide for use The order end date is the date the order ceases to be in effect, as specified on the order. If a young person ceases to be under the supervision relating to the order, but the order is still in effect, the order does not end. For example, if a young person is given a sentenced detention order with an end date of 1 December but is released on supervised release or parole on 1 November, the order end date remains 1 December unless the court varies the end date of the order. If the court varies the end date of the order, the new (varied) end date is the order end date. If an order is revoked or cancelled, the order end date is the date that the order was revoked or cancelled. This includes orders that are revoked or cancelled due to re-offending or failure to comply with conditions and orders that are cancelled, quashed or varied on appeal. If an order extends over two or more reporting periods and the order end date changes because the order was revoked, cancelled, quashed or varied, the order end date and the order end reason will differ between data submissions. The changed order end date should be supplied in the reporting period in which the order was revoked, cancelled, quashed or varied; however, a related record supplied in a previous data submission should not be updated. For example, a record relating to order ID 101 was supplied for the reporting period 2009–10 with an end date of 1/6/11 (that is, the order end date was after the end of the reporting period). A record relating to the same order was supplied in the following reporting period, 2010–11, but the order had been varied and now has an end date of 1/7/09. It is sufficient to report this new end date in the 2010–11 reporting period; a ‘fix’ is not required for the records relating to this order supplied in previous data submissions. When an order end date is after the end of the reporting period (e.g. for the 2009–10 reporting period, after the 30/06/2010) or if the order end date is null in the local data system, supply the order end date or insert the dummy date (22/02/2222) if the order end date is unknown. Do not end the order at the end of the reporting period. Business rules - The order end date must be on or after the start of the reporting period.
- The order start date must be on or before the order end date.
- If the order end date is on or before the end of the reporting period, the order end reason must be a reason other than 0 (not applicable).
- If the order identifier matches the order identifier of another record and the person identifiers are the same, the order end date of the first record should equal the order start date of the second record.
|
5 | Order type (national juvenile justice) | Number
[2]
| 11 | Pre-court appearance—police referred: Held in youth detention or remand centre or watch house | 12 | Pre-court appearance—Other police-referred pre-court arrangements | 21 | Pre-sentence—court referred or ordered: Remanded | 23 | Pre-sentence—home detention bail | 24 | Pre-sentence—supervised/conditional bail | 25 | Pre-sentence—other court-referred pre-sentence arrangements | 31 | Sentenced—community-based without additional mandated requirements | 32 | Sentenced—community-based with additional mandated requirements | 33 | Sentenced—Immediate release or suspended detention | 34 | Sentenced—home detention | 35 | Sentenced—detention | 36 | Sentenced—parole or supervised release | 37 | Sentenced—other sentence requiring youth justice supervision or case management | 38 | Sentenced—probation or similar not elsewhere classified | 41 | Other—other type of legal arrangement |
| |
6 | Order end reason (juvenile justice) | Number
[2]
| 1 | Completed | 2 | Revoked or cancelled for re-offending or failure to comply with conditions | 3 | Death | 4 | Cancelled, quashed, varied on appeal | 5 | Stayed pending appeal | 88 | Other reason | 0 | Not applicable |
| |
7 | Suburb/town/locality name within address | String
[46]
| X[X(45)]
A combination of alphanumeric characters. | DSS specific information: This item is collected for the young person’s last known home address before entering youth justice supervision. Guide for Use A Suburb/Town/Locality may be a town, city, suburb or commonly used location name such as a large agricultural property or Aboriginal community. The name should be spelt correctly and consistently and should not be a youth justice detention facility. Enter ‘UNKNOWN’ where the locality name or geographic area is not known. Enter ‘NO FIXED ADDRESS’ where the young person has no fixed address or is homeless. |
8 | Australian postcode (address) | Number
[4]
| {NNNN}
The Postcode datafile code set representing Australian postcodes as defined by Australia Post. | DSS specific information: This item is collected for the young person’s last known home address before entering youth justice supervision. Guide for Use Use the Australian Post postcode file. Leave the field blank if: - the last known home address is unknown
- the last known home address is outside Australia
- the young person had no fixed address.
|
9 | Australian state/territory identifier (person) | Number
[1]
| 1 | New South Wales | 2 | Victoria | 3 | Queensland | 4 | South Australia | 5 | Western Australia | 6 | Tasmania | 7 | Northern Territory | 8 | Australian Capital Territory | 9 | Other territories (Cocos (Keeling) Islands, Christmas Island and Jervis Bay Territory) |
| DSS specific information: This item is collected for the young person’s last known home address before entering youth justice supervision. Guide for Use Leave the field blank if: - the last known home address is unknown
- the last known home address is outside Australia
- the young person had no fixed address.
|
3 | Juvenile Justice Detention file cluster |
|
| |
1 | Person identifier | String
[20]
| XXXXXX[X(14)]
A logical combination of valid alphanumeric characters that identify an entity. | DSS specific information: The person identifier is a jurisdictionally-specific code that uniquely identifies a young person (youth justice client) within the State or Territory youth justice department responsible for the young person. A State or Territory identifier should be the first character of the person identifier according to the following: 1 New South Wales 2 Victoria 3 Queensland 4 South Australia 5 Western Australia 6 Tasmania 7 Northern Territory 8 Australian Capital Territory 9 Other territories (e.g. Christmas Island) |
2 | Detention start date | Date/Time
[8]
| DDMMYYYY
The day of a particular month and year. | DSS specific information: The period of time a young person is detained in a youth justice remand or detention centre in relation to a particular detention type, without change in detention centre and without escaping or absconding. A young person may have concurrent detention periods because detention periods relate to particular types of detention (e.g. remand, sentenced detention). For example, if a young person is detained on remand at the same time as they are serving a sentenced detention order, they would have two concurrent detention periods—one period with the details of the remand detention and the other with details on the sentenced detention. |
3 | Detention end date | Date/Time
[8]
| DDMMYYYY
The day of a particular month and year. | DSS specific information: Detention periods may be concurrent where the detention types are different. When a detention end date is after the end of the reporting period (e.g. for the 2009–10 reporting period, after the 30/06/2010) or if the detention end date is null in the local data system, supply the actual detention end date or insert the dummy date (22/02/2222) if the detention end date is unknown. Do not end the order at the end of the reporting period. |
4 | Detention type (youth justice) | String
[1]
| 1 | Pre-court appearance - police referred: Held in youth detention or remand centre or watch house | 2 | Pre-sentence - court referred or ordered: Remanded | 3 | Sentenced - Detention | 4 | Other - Other type of legal arrangement |
| |
5 | Detention end reason | Number
[2]
| 1 | Completed | 2 | Death | 3 | Transfer to another jurisdiction | 4 | Transfer to another youth detention centre within the jurisdiction | 5 | Release on parole | 6 | Release on bail | 7 | Release on bail by appeal | 8 | Release stayed pending appeal | 9 | Escape | 10 | Abscond on leave pass | 88 | Other reason | 0 | Not applicable |
| DSS specific information: Business rules: - If the detention end reason is CODE 5 (release on parole), the detention type must be sentenced (CODE 3).
- If the detention end reason is released on bail, the detention type must be unsentenced (CODE 1, CODE 2).
- If the detention end date is on or before the end of the reporting period, the detention end reason must be a reason other than CODE 0 (not applicable).
- If the detention end reason for a previous detention period was CODE 2 (death) there must not be any subsequent detention periods.
- If the detention end reason is CODE 2 (death) there must be a corresponding order period with an order end reason of CODE 3 (death).
- If the detention end date is on or before the end of the reporting period, the detention end reason must be a reason other than CODE 0 (not applicable).
- If the detention end date is after the end of the reporting period, the detention end reason must be CODE 0 (not applicable).
- If the detention end reason is CODE 4 (transfer to another youth detention centre within the jurisdiction), the next detention record must start within a day and have the same detention type.
No null values. |
6 | Suburb/town/locality name within address | String
[46]
| X[X(45)]
A combination of alphanumeric characters. | DSS specific information: This item is collected for the young person’s last known home address before entering youth justice detention. A Suburb/Town/Locality may be a town, city, suburb or commonly used location name such as a large agricultural property or Aboriginal community. The name should be spelt correctly and consistently and should not be a youth justice detention facility. Enter ‘Unknown’ where the locality name or geographic area is not known. Enter ‘No fixed address’ where the young person has no fixed address or is homeless. Suburb/Town/Locality should be sourced from the Australia Post Standard postcode file for the relevant year, available on the Australia Post website. |
7 | Australian postcode (address) | Number
[4]
| {NNNN}
The Postcode datafile code set representing Australian postcodes as defined by Australia Post. | DSS specific information: This item is collected twice: once for the young person’s last known home address before entering youth justice detention and once for the youth detention centre. Guide for Use Use the Australian Post postcode file. Leave the field blank if: - the last known home address is unknown
- the last known home address is outside Australia
- the young person had no fixed address.
|
8 | Australian state/territory identifier (person) | Number
[1]
| 1 | New South Wales | 2 | Victoria | 3 | Queensland | 4 | South Australia | 5 | Western Australia | 6 | Tasmania | 7 | Northern Territory | 8 | Australian Capital Territory | 9 | Other territories (Cocos (Keeling) Islands, Christmas Island and Jervis Bay Territory) |
| DSS specific information: This item is collected for the young person’s last known home address before entering youth justice detention. |
9 | Organisation name | String
[200]
| X[X(199)]
A combination of alphanumeric characters. | DSS specific information: This Data Element is used in the Detention file cluster to identify the name of the youth justice remand or detention centre where the young person is detained. If the detention end date of the current detention period is after the detention start date of the next detention period, the organisation name (youth justice remand or detention centre) of the current period and the next detention period must be the same. |
4 | Juvenile Justice Order types file cluster |
|
| |
1 | Order type (local juvenile justice identifier) | String
[50]
| X[X(49)]
A combination of alphanumeric characters that identify an object or entity. | |
2 | Order type (local juvenile justice description) | String
[100]
| X[X(99)]
A combination of alphanumeric characters. | |
3 | Order type (national juvenile justice) | Number
[2]
| 11 | Pre-court appearance—police referred: Held in youth detention or remand centre or watch house | 12 | Pre-court appearance—Other police-referred pre-court arrangements | 21 | Pre-sentence—court referred or ordered: Remanded | 23 | Pre-sentence—home detention bail | 24 | Pre-sentence—supervised/conditional bail | 25 | Pre-sentence—other court-referred pre-sentence arrangements | 31 | Sentenced—community-based without additional mandated requirements | 32 | Sentenced—community-based with additional mandated requirements | 33 | Sentenced—Immediate release or suspended detention | 34 | Sentenced—home detention | 35 | Sentenced—detention | 36 | Sentenced—parole or supervised release | 37 | Sentenced—other sentence requiring youth justice supervision or case management | 38 | Sentenced—probation or similar not elsewhere classified | 41 | Other—other type of legal arrangement |
| |
4 | Reporting period | String
[7]
| YYYY-YY The period of time from and including 1 July, to and including 30 June of the following year. | DSS specific information: This data element is not required if data supplied for a single reporting period. If supplying data for multiple reporting periods, specify the reporting period to which the record relates |