This paper investigates the impact of three age thresholds in British criminal law on self-reported offending: the possibility of custody at age 15, the switch from juvenile to adult law at age 18 and the switch from young offender institutions to adult prisons at age 21. Using longitudinal data from 2003 to 2006 I find strong evidence of discontinuous drops in self-reported crime at age 18 and 21. The effects are robust to various specifications of the age-crime relationship and to the inclusion of a wide range of controls, including arrests, court appearances and imprisonment
Rising juvenile crime rates over three decades spurred legal mobilizations within many state legisla...
In all states and territories, young people aged 10 and over can be charged with a criminal offence....
The trade-off between the immediate returns from committing a crime and the future costs of punishme...
This paper contributes to the literature on specific deterrence by addressing the issue of selecting...
This paper assesses whether perceived punishment severity changes discontinuously when an individual...
This chapter discusses the research on the general and specific deterrent effects of transferring ju...
How harshly should society punish young lawbreakers in order to prevent or reduce their criminal act...
This study focuses on court conviction rates—that is, the numbers and proportion of the population i...
This paper studies the impact of adult prosecution on recidivism and employment trajectories for ado...
This study focuses on crime participation – that is, the numbers and proportion of the population in...
This paper focuses on the offending behaviour of different generations. It considers the convictions...
This study focuses on court conviction rates—that is, the numbers and proportion of the population i...
The criminal justice system determines a criminal actor\u27s liability based primarily on the age of...
In the last decade, a number of states have expanded the jurisdiction of their juvenile courts by in...
Based on individual data on the population of those arrested in Medellín, we assess whether the chan...
Rising juvenile crime rates over three decades spurred legal mobilizations within many state legisla...
In all states and territories, young people aged 10 and over can be charged with a criminal offence....
The trade-off between the immediate returns from committing a crime and the future costs of punishme...
This paper contributes to the literature on specific deterrence by addressing the issue of selecting...
This paper assesses whether perceived punishment severity changes discontinuously when an individual...
This chapter discusses the research on the general and specific deterrent effects of transferring ju...
How harshly should society punish young lawbreakers in order to prevent or reduce their criminal act...
This study focuses on court conviction rates—that is, the numbers and proportion of the population i...
This paper studies the impact of adult prosecution on recidivism and employment trajectories for ado...
This study focuses on crime participation – that is, the numbers and proportion of the population in...
This paper focuses on the offending behaviour of different generations. It considers the convictions...
This study focuses on court conviction rates—that is, the numbers and proportion of the population i...
The criminal justice system determines a criminal actor\u27s liability based primarily on the age of...
In the last decade, a number of states have expanded the jurisdiction of their juvenile courts by in...
Based on individual data on the population of those arrested in Medellín, we assess whether the chan...
Rising juvenile crime rates over three decades spurred legal mobilizations within many state legisla...
In all states and territories, young people aged 10 and over can be charged with a criminal offence....
The trade-off between the immediate returns from committing a crime and the future costs of punishme...