Often, this is for offences directly related to their experience of poverty.  Access to social, health and integrated legal supports is critical to divert people from the justice system as early as possible.

We know that people facing homelessness are overrepresented within the justice system, often for offences directly related to their experience of poverty. For those people that do end up in the justice system, access to social, health and integrated legal supports that address the underlying causes of offending is critical to reduce recidivism and divert them out of the justice system as early as possible.

Drawing on 20 years as Victoria’s specialist community legal service for people experiencing or at risk of homelessness, we see three key opportunities to improve criminal justice system outcomes for Victorians facing housing insecurity:

See our submissions related to preventing the criminalisation of homelessness: