Skip to content
Crime, Results Statistics

The Transitional Alcohol and Other Drugs Project is recognised for its outreach counselling service for people with a history of involvement in the criminal justice system

Australian Institute of Criminology 2 mins read

The Transitional Alcohol and Other Drugs (AOD) Project today received a silver award in the community-led category of the 2023 Australian Crime and Violence Prevention Awards (ACVPAs).

The ACVPAs recognise best practice in the prevention or reduction of violence and other types of crime in Australia and play a vital role in highlighting effective community-based initiatives to prevent crime and violence before it occurs.

The Transitional AOD Project at the Community Restorative Centre is a holistic counselling service for people who are leaving prison or who have previously been incarcerated, providing pre-release and outreach AOD support across Greater Sydney. The project aims to empower individuals to break entrenched cycles of use and incarceration using a culturally competent, trauma-informed and non-judgemental framework.

Many of their clients have spent most of their adult lives in prison, some with complex mental issues and cognitive diabilities, and this is often the first therapeutic service that they have had access to.

“Our program fills a significant gap in support services available to people leaving prison and now thanks to the ACVPA, we hope to expand the model to regional areas where individuals are caught in cycles of disadvantage, substance use and imprisonment,” said manager David Chivers.

This is a long-term program with a much needed focus on reducing AOD use in our communities by regularly engaging people within the criminal justice system. This has seen significant reductions in offending and has been shown to be cost-effective,” said Australian Institute of Criminology (AIC) Deputy Director Dr Rick Brown.

These annual awards recognise the outstanding contributions being made across Australia for crime prevention, including the development and implementation of practical projects to reduce violence and other types of crime in the community.

The awards are a joint initiative of the Australian, state and territory governments and are delivered by the AIC. All projects are assessed each year by the ACVPA Board, which consists of senior law enforcement representatives from each state and territory police service, and is chaired by the AIC Director.

For more information about the award winners, please visit aic.gov.au/acvpa.


Contact details:

AIC Media:

02 6268 7343

[email protected]

More from this category

  • Crime, Government Federal
  • 04/02/2026
  • 06:00
Justice Reform Initiative

New data reveals soaring prison costs across Australia: a convict country following the American model

Australia’s continued reliance on incarceration is costing taxpayers more each year, with new data showing the ‘revolving door’ back into prison is becoming further entrenched as governments double down on the American approach of building more expensive prisons while ignoring the evidence about what actually reduces crime. The Productivity Commission’s latest Report on Government Services, released late Tuesday, reveals that total net operating and capital costs for Australian prisons have skyrocketed to more than $7.3 billion, representing a 5% increase since 2021-22. At the same time, the proportion of people returning to prison within two years has climbed to a…

  • Contains:
  • Crime, General News
  • 20/01/2026
  • 09:03
Parliament of Australia

PJCIS report on Exposure Draft Legislation: Combatting Antisemitism, Hate and Extremism Bill

The Parliamentary Joint Committee on Intelligence and Security (PJCIS) has today presented its report to the Parliament on the Exposure Draft of the Combatting Antisemitism, Hate and Extremism Bill 2026. The Exposure Draft legislation proposed a package of reforms intended to further criminalise hateful conduct and ensure that those who seek to spread hatred, division and radicalisation are met with severe penalties. Following its review, the Committee made four recommendations. These include urging the Parliament to ‘work together in a constructive and collaborative manner across all parties and crossbench members to ensure that the legislative response to antisemitism, hate and…

  • Crime, National News Current Affairs
  • 13/01/2026
  • 16:07
House of Representatives

Review of draft legislation to combat antisemitism, hate and extremism

The Parliamentary Joint Committee on Intelligence and Security (PJCIS) has commenced a review of theExposure Draft Legislation: Combatting Antisemitism, Hate and Extremism Bill 2026(‘the Exposure Draft Bill’). The Exposure Draft Bill proposes a comprehensive package of reforms intended to further criminalise hateful conduct and ensure that those who seek to spread hatred, division and radicalisation are met with severe penalties. The Exposure Draft Bill contains five schedules of amendments: Schedule 1 contains amendments to criminal law relating to hate speech, racial hatred, radicalisation, firearms and explosives Schedule 2 contains amendments to migration laws, particularly relating to visa refusals and cancellations…

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.