This study expands upon an earlier exploration of sentencing disparity in the Yakima County, Washington judicial system. The Sentencing Reform Act was adopted in 1981, becoming effective in 1984, to end inequitable sentences imposed on individuals who are convicted of similar offenses. This work adds to the original study by including an investigation of exceptional sentences and offense type crime. Independent variables are defendants\u27 ethnicity (Hispanic, Native American, and White), age, and gender. The period of investigation includes fiscal years 1986 through 1991. Data was provided to the researchers by the Washington Sentencing Guidelines Commission and was processed using a difference of means test (ANOVA program). The findin...
The disproportionate representation of minorities in the justice system of the U.S. has been viewed ...
A rural county with a high Hispanic population showed small disproportionate minority contact (citat...
Approximately seven decades of research on criminal sentencing has failed to uncover conclusive stat...
An important issue confronting the criminal justice system is sentencing disparity. Sentencing dispa...
Doctor of PhilosophyDepartment of Sociology, Anthropology, and Social WorkRichard GoeGovernment rese...
Current empirical estimates of racial and other unwarranted disparities in sentencing suffer from tw...
This research focuses on judicial decision-making in the federal courts to determine whether unwarra...
This study examines potential race and gender disparities in sentencing decisions in Blue Earth Coun...
This paper examines 77,236 federal offenders sentenced under the Sentencing Reform Act of 1984 and c...
This study explored the structural sources behind variability in the sentences applied to felons con...
This study explored the structural sources behind variability in the sentences applied to felons con...
Examines racial and ethnic disparities by state, and finds substantial variation in the degree of bl...
Criminal justice stakeholders are strongly concerned with disparities in penalty outcomes. Dispariti...
This Article presents new empirical evidence concerning the effects of United States v. Booker, whic...
This study uses data obtained from the United States Sentencing Commission for fiscal years 2003, 20...
The disproportionate representation of minorities in the justice system of the U.S. has been viewed ...
A rural county with a high Hispanic population showed small disproportionate minority contact (citat...
Approximately seven decades of research on criminal sentencing has failed to uncover conclusive stat...
An important issue confronting the criminal justice system is sentencing disparity. Sentencing dispa...
Doctor of PhilosophyDepartment of Sociology, Anthropology, and Social WorkRichard GoeGovernment rese...
Current empirical estimates of racial and other unwarranted disparities in sentencing suffer from tw...
This research focuses on judicial decision-making in the federal courts to determine whether unwarra...
This study examines potential race and gender disparities in sentencing decisions in Blue Earth Coun...
This paper examines 77,236 federal offenders sentenced under the Sentencing Reform Act of 1984 and c...
This study explored the structural sources behind variability in the sentences applied to felons con...
This study explored the structural sources behind variability in the sentences applied to felons con...
Examines racial and ethnic disparities by state, and finds substantial variation in the degree of bl...
Criminal justice stakeholders are strongly concerned with disparities in penalty outcomes. Dispariti...
This Article presents new empirical evidence concerning the effects of United States v. Booker, whic...
This study uses data obtained from the United States Sentencing Commission for fiscal years 2003, 20...
The disproportionate representation of minorities in the justice system of the U.S. has been viewed ...
A rural county with a high Hispanic population showed small disproportionate minority contact (citat...
Approximately seven decades of research on criminal sentencing has failed to uncover conclusive stat...