In this article we derive the mix of criminal sanctions—choosing among prison, parole, and probation—that achieves any target level of deterrence at lowest cost. We assume that prison has higher disutility and higher cost per unit of time than parole and probation and that potential offenders discount the future disutility of sanctions at a higher rate than the state discounts the future costs of sanctions. Our primary insight is that there is a front-loading advantage of imprisonment due to these differential discount rates. This advantage implies that whenever a sentence includes both a prison term and a parole term, the prison term should be imposed first, and that it may be optimal to employ a prison term even if prison has a higher cos...
Criminal sanctions are a necessary and appropriate response to crime. But extremism, especially when...
When considering the optimal combination of monetary sanctions (costless) and imprisonment (costly) ...
The theoretical shortcomings of indeterminate sentencing have been well documented, but less attenti...
In this article I examine the social desirability of rewarding prisoners for good behavior, either b...
This article discusses optimal sanctions for repeat offenders. We analysed a multi-period decision p...
The marginal deterrence principle of law enforcement implies that penalties must be scaled according...
The marginal deterrence principle of law enforcement implies that penalties must be scaled according...
This article considers the possibility of simultaneously reducing crime, prison sentences, and the t...
There is a considerable gap between the law and knowledge regarding the efficacy of state-imposed sa...
textabstractWe consider a stylized model of crime and punishment in which the prosecution policy is ...
We consider a stylized model of crime and punishment in which the prosecution policy is defined by t...
Economic models of crime have focused primarily on the goal of deterrence; the goal of incapacitatio...
The United States criminal justice system is the most punitive on earth. The total correctional popu...
The United States criminal justice system is the most punitive on earth. The total correctional popu...
A general result of the literature on crime and punishment is that imprisonment is not optimal if fi...
Criminal sanctions are a necessary and appropriate response to crime. But extremism, especially when...
When considering the optimal combination of monetary sanctions (costless) and imprisonment (costly) ...
The theoretical shortcomings of indeterminate sentencing have been well documented, but less attenti...
In this article I examine the social desirability of rewarding prisoners for good behavior, either b...
This article discusses optimal sanctions for repeat offenders. We analysed a multi-period decision p...
The marginal deterrence principle of law enforcement implies that penalties must be scaled according...
The marginal deterrence principle of law enforcement implies that penalties must be scaled according...
This article considers the possibility of simultaneously reducing crime, prison sentences, and the t...
There is a considerable gap between the law and knowledge regarding the efficacy of state-imposed sa...
textabstractWe consider a stylized model of crime and punishment in which the prosecution policy is ...
We consider a stylized model of crime and punishment in which the prosecution policy is defined by t...
Economic models of crime have focused primarily on the goal of deterrence; the goal of incapacitatio...
The United States criminal justice system is the most punitive on earth. The total correctional popu...
The United States criminal justice system is the most punitive on earth. The total correctional popu...
A general result of the literature on crime and punishment is that imprisonment is not optimal if fi...
Criminal sanctions are a necessary and appropriate response to crime. But extremism, especially when...
When considering the optimal combination of monetary sanctions (costless) and imprisonment (costly) ...
The theoretical shortcomings of indeterminate sentencing have been well documented, but less attenti...