We demonstrate strong self-referential effects in county-level data concerning use of the death penalty. We first show event-dependency using a repeated-event model. Higher numbers of previous events reduce the expected time delay before the next event. Second, we use a cross-sectional time-series approach to model the number of death sentences imposed in a given county in a given year. This model shows that the cumulative number of death sentences previously imposed in the same county is a strong predictor of the number imposed in a given year. Results raise troubling substantive implications: The number of death sentences in a given county in a given year is better predicted by that county's previous experience in imposing death than by t...
Policymakers\u27 false beliefs about capital punishment\u27s universal deterrent effect may have cau...
The adoption and implementation of the death penalty varies greatly by state. This dissertation will...
Many studies on capital punishment use death sentence or execution data to perform analyses. This pa...
American death sentences have both declined and become concentrated in a small group of counties. In...
This pre-analysis plan outlines a research strategy to test a "self-reinforcing" theory of death pen...
Since 1976, the United States has seen over 1,400 judicial executions, and these have been highly co...
Both legal scholars and social scientists have leveraged new research evidence on the deterrent effe...
We review statistical patterns of the geographic distribution of US executions, compare them to homi...
The number of murders in a state largely determines the size of a state\u27s death row. The more mur...
Today, only a few dozen scattered counties actually impose death sentences, supporting the death pen...
This study employs a panel of U.S. state-level data over the years 1978-1997 to estimate the deterre...
Researchers have long used repeated cross sectional observations of homicide rates and sanctions to ...
This paper reviews the econometric issues in efforts to estimate the impact of the death penalty on ...
Defining statutes for capital punishment crimes vary by state. Within states the distribution of cap...
In the literature on capital punishment, there is little research on the relationship between modern...
Policymakers\u27 false beliefs about capital punishment\u27s universal deterrent effect may have cau...
The adoption and implementation of the death penalty varies greatly by state. This dissertation will...
Many studies on capital punishment use death sentence or execution data to perform analyses. This pa...
American death sentences have both declined and become concentrated in a small group of counties. In...
This pre-analysis plan outlines a research strategy to test a "self-reinforcing" theory of death pen...
Since 1976, the United States has seen over 1,400 judicial executions, and these have been highly co...
Both legal scholars and social scientists have leveraged new research evidence on the deterrent effe...
We review statistical patterns of the geographic distribution of US executions, compare them to homi...
The number of murders in a state largely determines the size of a state\u27s death row. The more mur...
Today, only a few dozen scattered counties actually impose death sentences, supporting the death pen...
This study employs a panel of U.S. state-level data over the years 1978-1997 to estimate the deterre...
Researchers have long used repeated cross sectional observations of homicide rates and sanctions to ...
This paper reviews the econometric issues in efforts to estimate the impact of the death penalty on ...
Defining statutes for capital punishment crimes vary by state. Within states the distribution of cap...
In the literature on capital punishment, there is little research on the relationship between modern...
Policymakers\u27 false beliefs about capital punishment\u27s universal deterrent effect may have cau...
The adoption and implementation of the death penalty varies greatly by state. This dissertation will...
Many studies on capital punishment use death sentence or execution data to perform analyses. This pa...