Sentence enhancements may reduce crime both by deterring potential criminals and by incapacitating previous offenders, removing these possible recidivists from society for longer periods. I estimate the incapacitative effect of longer sentences by exploiting a 2001 change in Maryland’s sentencing guidelines that reduced the sentences of 23-, 24-, and 25-year-olds with juvenile delinquent records by a mean of 222 days. I find that, during this sentence disenhancement, offenders were, on average, arrested for 2.8 criminal acts and were involved in 1.4–1.6 serious crimes per person during the period when they would have otherwise been incarcerated. Although my findings are significantly lower than previous estimates of incapacitation,...
Objective: Sentencing guidelines, statutory presumptive sentencing, determinate sentencing, truth in...
Beginning in the 1970s, the United States embarked on a shift in its penal policies, tripling the pe...
In the early 1990s, with violent crime at record levels and public alarm growing, federal and state ...
It is typically difficult to differentiate empirically between deterrence and incapacitation since b...
Increasing criminal sanctions may reduce crime through two primary mechanisms: deterrence and incapa...
Making the length of a prison sentence conditional on an individual’s offense history is shown to be...
Making the length of a prison sentence conditional on an individual’s offense history is shown to be...
Despite its widespread use, research shows that the effect of incarceration as a deterrent to crime ...
We jail too many people and it costs too much. Incarceration is not only expensive, it also is prone...
Since the 1790s, prisons in the United States were built with the means of reducing crime rates thro...
Incapacitation of offenders has been an influential goal of criminal justice policy during the era o...
Among the manifold goals of penal confinement, incapacitation aims to impose a period of “time out” ...
During the last decades, societies have largely used incarceration as a central crime control tool. ...
Little empirical study had been done to confirm or refute the effectiveness of incarceration in redu...
Making the length of a prison sentence conditional upon an individual’s offence history is shown to ...
Objective: Sentencing guidelines, statutory presumptive sentencing, determinate sentencing, truth in...
Beginning in the 1970s, the United States embarked on a shift in its penal policies, tripling the pe...
In the early 1990s, with violent crime at record levels and public alarm growing, federal and state ...
It is typically difficult to differentiate empirically between deterrence and incapacitation since b...
Increasing criminal sanctions may reduce crime through two primary mechanisms: deterrence and incapa...
Making the length of a prison sentence conditional on an individual’s offense history is shown to be...
Making the length of a prison sentence conditional on an individual’s offense history is shown to be...
Despite its widespread use, research shows that the effect of incarceration as a deterrent to crime ...
We jail too many people and it costs too much. Incarceration is not only expensive, it also is prone...
Since the 1790s, prisons in the United States were built with the means of reducing crime rates thro...
Incapacitation of offenders has been an influential goal of criminal justice policy during the era o...
Among the manifold goals of penal confinement, incapacitation aims to impose a period of “time out” ...
During the last decades, societies have largely used incarceration as a central crime control tool. ...
Little empirical study had been done to confirm or refute the effectiveness of incarceration in redu...
Making the length of a prison sentence conditional upon an individual’s offence history is shown to ...
Objective: Sentencing guidelines, statutory presumptive sentencing, determinate sentencing, truth in...
Beginning in the 1970s, the United States embarked on a shift in its penal policies, tripling the pe...
In the early 1990s, with violent crime at record levels and public alarm growing, federal and state ...