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Effects of Court Officials on Sentence Severity: Do Judges Make a Difference?
54
Citations
25
References
1982
Year
PenologyCriminal Justice SystemLegal ComplianceConstitutional LawCourt OfficialsLawSentence SeverityCriminal LawSocial SciencesCriminal Justice ProcessCase LawCourt ActorsJusticeLegal VariablesPsychologyCriminal BehaviorCriminal JusticeProcedural Justice
ABSTRACT The present article examines the effects on sentencing of a number of variables measuring court actors and their traits. Sentencing patterns were shown to vary substantially from judge to judge but the differences were found to be related more to the types of cases judges received than to sentencing styles of individual judges. Independent of traditional sociodemographic traits of offenders and legal variables, individual judges do not appear to sentence differently. Moreover, when we estimated equations which included judicial background characteristics, there were no discernible independent effects. These findings differ from both informed intuition and inferences one might draw from previous research. Consideration of subcultures of justice and cases on which court officials disagree about sentences may help explain differences between present and past research.
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