Title of article
Catching the Really Bad Guys: An Assessment of the Efficacy of the U.S. Criminal Justice System
Author/Authors
Barnes، نويسنده , , J.C.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2014
Pages
9
From page
338
To page
346
Abstract
AbstractPurpose
y shows that one of the most important institutions to a society is its criminal justice system. The current study offers an analysis of the criminal justice system’s effectiveness in identifying, apprehending, convicting, and punishing high-level/persistent offenders.
s
ere drawn from all four waves of the Add Health study. Survey-corrected univariate statistics and logistic regression models were estimated to provide population parameter estimates of the frequency of arrest and punishment for a group of persistent offenders compared to non-persistent offenders.
s
gs indicated persistent offenders (as identified by self-reported crime) were much more likely to be arrested (63% vs. 26%), accounted for more arrests ( x ¯ = 1.71 vs. x ¯ = .53), were more likely to be convicted (39% vs. 11%), were more likely to be placed on probation (38% vs. 12%), and were more likely to be sent to jail (43% vs. 13%) compared to non-persistent offenders. These differences remained when levels of psychopathy, age, race, and sex were controlled in the logistic regression models.
sions
findings suggest the criminal justice system does a good job of identifying and punishing offenders who break the law more frequently.
Journal title
Journal of Criminal Justice
Serial Year
2014
Journal title
Journal of Criminal Justice
Record number
1707766
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