Prosecutors in the United States may be either appointed or elected officials. They are also bureau chiefs of a public office. Most models of prosecutor behavior focus on the bureaucratic role of the prosecutor. The objective of this research is to present a model of prosecutor behavior that places the political objectives of prosecutors in the fore. This research reviews the historical development of the prosecutor's office in the United States and examines the previous theoretical and empirical research on prosecutor incentives. Multivariate statistical tests are employed to test hypotheses derived from a political model of prosecution using data from a nationwide sample of elected and appointed prosecutors.Several theorized relationships...
The power of the modern prosecutor arises from several features of the criminal justice landscape: w...
The key to the growing prominence of prosecutors, both in the United States and elsewhere, lies in t...
It is natural to suppose that a prosecutor’s conviction rate – the ratio of convictions to cases pro...
In the U.S. many public services are provided by individuals who are selected in local elections. We...
Part I of this Article reviews the existing evidence about the election of criminal justice official...
In this paper, we address empirically the trade-offs involved in choosing between bureaucrats and po...
The United States is the only country that elects its local prosecutors. In theory, these local elec...
Prosecutors routinely decline to file charges in individual cases; sometimes they also announce gene...
This thesis dissects prosecutor discretion for appointed and elected prosecutors after a “catalyst” ...
Prosecutors are one of the most powerful actors in the American criminal justice system, yet there i...
This paper analyzes how the budget allocated to state prosecutors varies from one district to anothe...
The conventional academic wisdom is that prosecutor elections are little more than empty exercises. ...
No government official has as much unreviewable power or discretion as the prosecutor. Few regulatio...
Prosecutorial discretion is a problem that most scholars attack from the outside. Most scholars favo...
"Prosecutors have a powerful and generally little-understood role in the criminal justice system. Th...
The power of the modern prosecutor arises from several features of the criminal justice landscape: w...
The key to the growing prominence of prosecutors, both in the United States and elsewhere, lies in t...
It is natural to suppose that a prosecutor’s conviction rate – the ratio of convictions to cases pro...
In the U.S. many public services are provided by individuals who are selected in local elections. We...
Part I of this Article reviews the existing evidence about the election of criminal justice official...
In this paper, we address empirically the trade-offs involved in choosing between bureaucrats and po...
The United States is the only country that elects its local prosecutors. In theory, these local elec...
Prosecutors routinely decline to file charges in individual cases; sometimes they also announce gene...
This thesis dissects prosecutor discretion for appointed and elected prosecutors after a “catalyst” ...
Prosecutors are one of the most powerful actors in the American criminal justice system, yet there i...
This paper analyzes how the budget allocated to state prosecutors varies from one district to anothe...
The conventional academic wisdom is that prosecutor elections are little more than empty exercises. ...
No government official has as much unreviewable power or discretion as the prosecutor. Few regulatio...
Prosecutorial discretion is a problem that most scholars attack from the outside. Most scholars favo...
"Prosecutors have a powerful and generally little-understood role in the criminal justice system. Th...
The power of the modern prosecutor arises from several features of the criminal justice landscape: w...
The key to the growing prominence of prosecutors, both in the United States and elsewhere, lies in t...
It is natural to suppose that a prosecutor’s conviction rate – the ratio of convictions to cases pro...