The Political Context of Sentencing: An Analysis of Community and Individual Determinants
Social Forces, December 2002, 81(2):577-604
29 Pages Posted: 29 Nov 2014
Date Written: 2002
Abstract
Most studies of jail or prison sentence length focus on whether offender characteristics produce sentencing differentials after legal effects have been controlled, but the findings in the literature have not been consistent, probably because most studies have been based on a few jurisdictions. To see if political effects explain these discrepancies, this study of 337 jurisdictions in seven states analyzes interaction effects between external political influences and offender attributes after holding constant multiple individual and environmental factors. To adjust for censoring, Tobit is used to analyze the length of sentences, while state differences are held constant with state-specific dummy variables. When interaction terms are not included, the results are consistent with prior research. But the inclusion of political interactions produces findings suggesting that African Americans and males receive longer sentences when local courts are embedded in conservative political environments where a law-and-order presidential candidate received more votes. These results support theoretical claims that punishment is an intensely political process.
Keywords: crime, felony, sentencing, politics of punishment, sentence length, contextual analysis, tobit regression
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
Do you have negative results from your research you’d like to share?
Recommended Papers
-
By David Bjerk
-
Prosecutorial Discretion and the Imposition of Mandatory Minimum Sentences
By Jeffery Todd Ulmer, Megan Kurlychek, ...
-
Sentencing Guidelines, Tis Legislation, and Bargaining Power
By Dhammika Dharmapala, Nuno Garoupa, ...
-
Loyalty to One's Convictions: The Prosecutor and Tunnel Vision
-
By Shawn D. Bushway, Emily Greene Owens, ...
-
Responses to More Severe Punishment in the Courtroom: Evidence from Truth-in-Sentencing Laws
By Libor Dusek and Fusako Tsuchimoto
-
Responses to More Severe Punishment in the Courtroom: Evidence from Truth-in-Sentencing Laws
By Fusako Tsuchimoto and Libor Dusek