RT Article T1 Australian imprisonment 2002–2016: Crime, policing and penal policy: JF The Australian and New Zealand journal of criminology VO 51 IS 4 SP 537 OP 559 A1 Weatherburn, Donald James 1951- LA English YR 2018 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/1737615398 AB The period between 2002 and 2016 saw substantial reductions in a number of major categories of crime in Australia, including murder, robbery, break and enter, motor vehicle theft and ‘other’ theft. One might expect the Australian imprisonment rate to have fallen too, but it did not. Over the same period, the Australian imprisonment rate grew by 36%. Most commentators assume the growth in imprisonment rates is due to the growth in punitive penal policies. Little attention has been paid to the influence of crime and policing policy. In this article I present evidence that much of the growth in imprisonment rates stems from rising rates of drug use/drug trafficking and changes in policing policy vis-à-vis family violence and child sexual assault. K1 Australia K1 Crimmigration K1 Deportations K1 New Zealand K1 Pre-emption K1 Security K1 Responsibilization DO 10.1177/0004865818757585