Bureau of Crime Statistics and Research explained

Agency Name:NSW Bureau of Crime Statistics and Research
Type:Agency
Formed:1969
Jurisdiction:New South Wales
Headquarters:6 Parramatta Square, 10 Darcy Street, Parramatta, NSW, Australia
Region Code:AU-NSW
Postcode:2000
Minister1 Name:Hon. Mark Speakman SC MP
Minister1 Pfo:Attorney General
Chief1 Name:Jackie Fitzgerald
Chief1 Position:
Executive Director
Agency Type:Agency
Parent Agency:Department of Communities and Justice

The Bureau of Crime Statistics and Research (BOCSAR), also known as NSW Bureau of Crime Statistics and Research, is an agency of the Department of Communities and Justice responsible for research into crime and criminal justice and evaluation of the initiatives designed to reduce crime and reoffending in the state of New South Wales, Australia.

Management and functions

BOCSAR was established in 1969.[1]

The executive director of BOCSAR since July 2019 is Jackie Fitzgerald.[1] She took over from Don Weatherburn PSM, who spent over 30 years in the position.[2]

The Bureau is responsible for identifying factors affecting the distribution and frequency of crime and the effectiveness of the NSW criminal justice system, and for making this information available to its clients.[1]

It develops and maintains statistical databases on crime and criminal justice in NSW, monitors trends in crime and criminal justice, and also conducts research on crime and criminal justice issues and problems.[1]

Statistical information publicly available

Statistical information and various publications of the Bureau are accessible by the public.[1]

Information about crime that is typically stored in the databases includes:[1]

Aggregated data can answer questions such as which areas have high reported crime rates, how many people are charged with a specific offence, or what penalties are imposed for specific offences.[1]

In the news

In September 2018, then director Weatherburn admitted the Bureau was at fault for releasing misleading drug detection results. Figures in some cases were doubled, after BOCSAR had mistakenly added positive results to searches by NSW Police. However errors like this one have been extremely rare.[3]

In early 2019, Weatherburn announced a new BOCSAR review of circle sentencing (a process which puts Aboriginal adult offenders before a circle of elders, members of the community, police and the judiciary, rather than a traditional courtroom), with results due in 2020. The previous one had been published in 2008.[4]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: BOCSAR. About us. 11 October 2019.
  2. Web site: BOCSAR. News update - Don Weatherburn is leaving BOCSAR. 11 October 2019.
  3. News: Thousands of recorded drug busts in NSW never happened. Nigel. Gladstone. 9 September 2019. The Sydney Morning Herald. 11 October 2019.
  4. News: Australian Broadcasting Corporation. ABC News. Does circle sentencing reduce recidivism and keep Indigenous offenders out of jail? A study will find out. 10 February 2019. Claudia. Jambor. 11 October 2019. ABC Western Plains.