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Racial sentencing disparities and differential progression through the criminal Justice System: evidence from linked federal and state court data

Racial sentencing disparities and differential progression through the criminal Justice System: evidence from linked federal and state court data
Racial sentencing disparities and differential progression through the criminal Justice System: evidence from linked federal and state court data
Several key actors -- police, prosecutors, judges -- can alter the course of individuals passing through the multi-staged criminal justice system. I use linked arrest-sentencing data for federal courts from 1994-2010 to examine the role that earlier stages play when estimating Black-white sentencing gaps. I find no evidence of sample selection at play in the federal setting, suggesting federal judges are largely responsible for racial sentencing disparities. In contrast, I document substantial sample selection bias in two different state courts systems. Estimates of racial and ethnic sentencing gaps that ignore selection underestimate the true disparities by 15% and 13% respectively.
econ.GN, q-fin.EC
McConnell, Brendon
c513d7c3-60d0-4d1a-9a0c-8763e2aeb52a
McConnell, Brendon
c513d7c3-60d0-4d1a-9a0c-8763e2aeb52a

[Unknown type: UNSPECIFIED]

Record type: UNSPECIFIED

Abstract

Several key actors -- police, prosecutors, judges -- can alter the course of individuals passing through the multi-staged criminal justice system. I use linked arrest-sentencing data for federal courts from 1994-2010 to examine the role that earlier stages play when estimating Black-white sentencing gaps. I find no evidence of sample selection at play in the federal setting, suggesting federal judges are largely responsible for racial sentencing disparities. In contrast, I document substantial sample selection bias in two different state courts systems. Estimates of racial and ethnic sentencing gaps that ignore selection underestimate the true disparities by 15% and 13% respectively.

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2203.14282v2 - Author's Original
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Published date: 27 March 2022
Keywords: econ.GN, q-fin.EC

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 471759
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/471759
PURE UUID: 15156358-f301-4ec2-97ee-e2f7876f9a9f
ORCID for Brendon McConnell: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-6029-9479

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Date deposited: 17 Nov 2022 17:47
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 22:20

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