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Title: Within-race variations in sentencing outcomes: Nationality and punishment among Asians in United States federal courts

Citation Type: Journal Article

Publication Year: 2021

ISSN: 17413095

DOI: 10.1177/14624745211063120

Abstract: There is robust evidence that Asians are not treated differently from Whites and receive greater leniency than Blacks and Hispanics in criminal punishment. Some research findings even suggest that Asians receive the most favorable sentencing outcomes among all racial/ethnic groups. This line of research, however, has not paid attention to Asian nationality groups. Particularly, it is unclear whether there is within-race variation among offenders from different Asian countries. Using the data compiled by the United States Sentencing Commission to examine whether and how an Asian's nationality affects criminal punishment, this study focuses on sentences imposed on offenders who are Chinese, Filipino, Indian, Korean, Pakistani, and Vietnamese nationals. Results from logistic, ordinary least squares, and Tobit regression analyses indicate that with legal and extralegal factors held constant, Asians of different nationalities face varying odds of incarceration or downward departures, and they receive dissimilar sentence lengths.

Url: https://doi.org/10.1177/14624745211063120

User Submitted?: No

Authors: Wu, Jawjeong

Periodical (Full): Punishment & Society

Issue: 2

Volume: 25

Pages: 449-470

Data Collections: IPUMS USA

Topics: Crime and Deviance, Migration and Immigration, Population Data Science, Race and Ethnicity

Countries:

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