Simultaneity between prisoner populations and crime rates makes it difficult to isolate the causal effect of changes in prison populations on crime. To break that simultaneity, this paper uses prison overcrowding litigation in a state as an instrument for changes in the prison population. The resulting elasticities are two to three times greater than those of previous studies. A one-prisoner reduction is associated with an increase of fifteen Index I crimes per year. While calculations of the costs of crime are inherently uncertain, it appears that the social benefits associated with crime reduction equal or exceed the social costs of incarceration for the marginal prisoner. Copyright 1996, the President and Fellows of Harvard College and t...
Since the United States began using incarceration as its cornerstone of punishment for those who tra...
Research Summary: Recent declines in imprisonment raise a critical question: Can prison populations ...
U.S. federal courts have forced states to reduce prison crowding since 1969. We examine states ’ res...
During the last decades, societies have largely used incarceration as a central crime control tool. ...
Prior macro-level studies examining the impact of prison population growth on crime rates have produ...
This paper studies the mechanical theory of crime and incarceration-the notion that changes in impri...
In the past 10 years, the number of prisoners increased rapidly from 13,000 to 20,500 and the insuff...
This paper studies the mechanical theory of crime and incarceration-the notion that changes in impri...
This dissertation presents three independent research projects. The first studies the effect of pris...
This paper examines various ways in which prison may have inadvertently affected crime rates. The qu...
Although there is general consensus that growth in the prison population should be reversed, there i...
The United States prison population has grown seven-fold over the past 35 years. This dissertation l...
Since the 1790s, prisons in the United States were built with the means of reducing crime rates thro...
This paper analyzes the cost of state prisons as a function of state prison populations across U.S. ...
The U.S incarceration rate is the highest in the world. Many of the U.S state prison systems are ove...
Since the United States began using incarceration as its cornerstone of punishment for those who tra...
Research Summary: Recent declines in imprisonment raise a critical question: Can prison populations ...
U.S. federal courts have forced states to reduce prison crowding since 1969. We examine states ’ res...
During the last decades, societies have largely used incarceration as a central crime control tool. ...
Prior macro-level studies examining the impact of prison population growth on crime rates have produ...
This paper studies the mechanical theory of crime and incarceration-the notion that changes in impri...
In the past 10 years, the number of prisoners increased rapidly from 13,000 to 20,500 and the insuff...
This paper studies the mechanical theory of crime and incarceration-the notion that changes in impri...
This dissertation presents three independent research projects. The first studies the effect of pris...
This paper examines various ways in which prison may have inadvertently affected crime rates. The qu...
Although there is general consensus that growth in the prison population should be reversed, there i...
The United States prison population has grown seven-fold over the past 35 years. This dissertation l...
Since the 1790s, prisons in the United States were built with the means of reducing crime rates thro...
This paper analyzes the cost of state prisons as a function of state prison populations across U.S. ...
The U.S incarceration rate is the highest in the world. Many of the U.S state prison systems are ove...
Since the United States began using incarceration as its cornerstone of punishment for those who tra...
Research Summary: Recent declines in imprisonment raise a critical question: Can prison populations ...
U.S. federal courts have forced states to reduce prison crowding since 1969. We examine states ’ res...