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Title: Who Gets a Second Chance? Effectiveness and Equity in Supervision of Criminal Offenders

Citation Type: Miscellaneous

Publication Year: 2019

Abstract: Most convicted criminals are sentenced to probation and allowed to return home. On proba- tion, however, a technical rule violation such as not paying fees can result in incarceration. Rule violations account for more than 30% of all prison spells in many states and are significantly more common among black offenders. I test whether technical rules are effective tools for identifying likely reoffenders and deterring crime and examine their disparate racial impacts using adminis- trative data from North Carolina. Analysis of a 2011 reform eliminating prison punishments for technical violations reveals that 40% of rule breakers would go on to commit crimes if their vio- lations were ignored. The same reform also closed a 33% black-white gap in incarceration rates without substantially increasing the black-white reoffending gap. These effects combined imply that technical rules target riskier probationers overall, but disproportionately affect low-risk black offenders. To justify black probationers’ higher violation rate on efficiency grounds, their crimes must be roughly twice as socially costly as that of white probationers. Exploiting the repeat-spell nature of the North Carolina data, I estimate a semi-parametric competing risks model that allows me to distinguish the effects of particular types of technical rules from unobserved probationer het- erogeneity. The estimates reveal that the deterrent effects of harsh punishments for rule breaking are negligible. Rules related to the payment of fees and fines, which are common in many states, are ineffective in tagging likely reoffenders and drive differential impacts by race. These findings illus- trate the potentially large influence of facially race-neutral policies on racial disparities in criminal justice outcomes.

Url: https://economics.princeton.edu/wp-content/uploads/2020/01/RoseEvan-JMP.pdf

User Submitted?: No

Authors: Rose, Evan, K

Publisher: U.C. Berkeley Department of Economics

Data Collections: IPUMS USA

Topics: Crime and Deviance

Countries: United States

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