This paper assesses whether perceived punishment severity changes discontinuously when an individual becomes an adult in the eyes of the courts. I find that the perceived chance of jail increases by 5.2 percentage points at the age of criminal majority, which is over and above the general effect of aging. The magnitude of this subjective change in the chance of jail at the age of majority appears to be substantially smaller than that found in objective data. Finally, a reduced-form analysis of whether self-reported criminal behavior changes discontinuously at the age of criminal majority finds little consistent evidence of deterrence. (JEL K42, D01
The purpose of this study is to examine the impact of juvenile status on sentencing in the adult cri...
The country’s punitive turn over the last forty years has spurred a robust research literature to do...
In this article, the authors used a statewide survey to investigate the extent to which beliefs rega...
Over the last two decades the punitiveness of the juvenile justice system has declined" substantiall...
This paper investigates the impact of three age thresholds in British criminal law on self-reported ...
We specify an individual-level model linking crime desistance to estimates of legal risk, differenti...
Recent advances and debates surrounding general/developmental and static/dynamic theories of crime c...
This paper empirically examines perceptions of the criminal justice system held by young males using...
In the last decade, a number of states have expanded the jurisdiction of their juvenile courts by in...
Conventional wisdom holds that the public supports harsh punishment of juvenile offenders, and polit...
The purpose of this study is to examine the impact of juvenile status on sentencing in the adult cri...
This paper empirically examines perceptions of the criminal justice system held by young males using...
Few sociologists have studied the later stages of careers in deviance and criminality. This paper de...
This study focuses on court conviction rates—that is, the numbers and proportion of the population i...
This study focuses on court conviction rates—that is, the numbers and proportion of the population i...
The purpose of this study is to examine the impact of juvenile status on sentencing in the adult cri...
The country’s punitive turn over the last forty years has spurred a robust research literature to do...
In this article, the authors used a statewide survey to investigate the extent to which beliefs rega...
Over the last two decades the punitiveness of the juvenile justice system has declined" substantiall...
This paper investigates the impact of three age thresholds in British criminal law on self-reported ...
We specify an individual-level model linking crime desistance to estimates of legal risk, differenti...
Recent advances and debates surrounding general/developmental and static/dynamic theories of crime c...
This paper empirically examines perceptions of the criminal justice system held by young males using...
In the last decade, a number of states have expanded the jurisdiction of their juvenile courts by in...
Conventional wisdom holds that the public supports harsh punishment of juvenile offenders, and polit...
The purpose of this study is to examine the impact of juvenile status on sentencing in the adult cri...
This paper empirically examines perceptions of the criminal justice system held by young males using...
Few sociologists have studied the later stages of careers in deviance and criminality. This paper de...
This study focuses on court conviction rates—that is, the numbers and proportion of the population i...
This study focuses on court conviction rates—that is, the numbers and proportion of the population i...
The purpose of this study is to examine the impact of juvenile status on sentencing in the adult cri...
The country’s punitive turn over the last forty years has spurred a robust research literature to do...
In this article, the authors used a statewide survey to investigate the extent to which beliefs rega...