Large research efforts have been directed at the exploration of ethnic disparities in the criminal justice system, documenting harsher treatment of minority ethnic defendants, across offence types, criminal justice decisions, and jurisdictions. However, most studies on the topic have relied on observational data, which can only approximate ‘like with like’ comparisons. We use causal diagrams to lay out explicitly the different ways estimates of ethnic disparities in sentencing derived from observational data could be biased. Beyond the commonly acknowledged problem of unobserved case characteristics, we also discuss other less well-known, yet likely more consequential problems: measurement error in the form of racially-determined case chara...
Over the past decade, many arguments over racial disparity have become the center of worldwide media...
This Article presents new empirical evidence concerning the effects of United States v. Booker, whic...
This Article does not challenge the prior research on sentencing discrimination between racial categ...
Large research efforts have been directed at the exploration of ethnic disparities in the criminal j...
Large research efforts have been directed at the exploration of ethnic disparities in the criminal j...
Strong evidence of racial and ethnic disparities has been documented in recent government-led report...
abstract: Current research on criminal case processing typically examines a single decision-making p...
Current empirical estimates of racial and other unwarranted disparities in sentencing suffer from tw...
Are minorities treated differently by the legal system? Systematic racial differences in case charac...
Much empirical analysis has documented racial disparities at the beginning and end stages of crimina...
Criminologists have long debated the presence of racial disparity at various places in the criminal ...
Research on sentence consistency in England and Wales has focused on disparities between courts, wit...
An important issue confronting the criminal justice system is sentencing disparity. Sentencing dispa...
Several key actors -- police, prosecutors, judges -- can alter the course of individuals passing thr...
Numerous sentencing studies have addressed the question: Are racial/ethnic minorities treated more h...
Over the past decade, many arguments over racial disparity have become the center of worldwide media...
This Article presents new empirical evidence concerning the effects of United States v. Booker, whic...
This Article does not challenge the prior research on sentencing discrimination between racial categ...
Large research efforts have been directed at the exploration of ethnic disparities in the criminal j...
Large research efforts have been directed at the exploration of ethnic disparities in the criminal j...
Strong evidence of racial and ethnic disparities has been documented in recent government-led report...
abstract: Current research on criminal case processing typically examines a single decision-making p...
Current empirical estimates of racial and other unwarranted disparities in sentencing suffer from tw...
Are minorities treated differently by the legal system? Systematic racial differences in case charac...
Much empirical analysis has documented racial disparities at the beginning and end stages of crimina...
Criminologists have long debated the presence of racial disparity at various places in the criminal ...
Research on sentence consistency in England and Wales has focused on disparities between courts, wit...
An important issue confronting the criminal justice system is sentencing disparity. Sentencing dispa...
Several key actors -- police, prosecutors, judges -- can alter the course of individuals passing thr...
Numerous sentencing studies have addressed the question: Are racial/ethnic minorities treated more h...
Over the past decade, many arguments over racial disparity have become the center of worldwide media...
This Article presents new empirical evidence concerning the effects of United States v. Booker, whic...
This Article does not challenge the prior research on sentencing discrimination between racial categ...