Publication | Closed Access
An Integration of Theories to Explain Judicial Discretion
696
Citations
62
References
1991
Year
Forensic PsychologyCriminal CodeCriminal Justice ReformCausal AttributionLawCriminal LawUncertainty AvoidancePsychologyCriminal Justice ProcessCriminal Justice SystemLegal TheoryBiasJudicial DiscretionDecision MakingOffender ClassificationCriminal JusticeJusticeCriminal BehaviorProcedural Justice
Based on an integration of work on uncertainty avoidance in decision making with research on causal attribution in punishment, the author hypothesizes that judges attempt to manage uncertainty by developing “patterned responses” that are the product of an attribution process involving assessments of the offender's likelihood of committing future crime. Washington, D. C, felony sentencing data generated by the Prosecutor's Management and Information System (PROMIS) were used to test this integrated theoretical model. Support for the theoretical integration is provided by the evidence of the effects of prior record, defendant's race, use of a weapon, pretrial release, and the interaction between defendant's race and bail outcome on sentence severity. Contrary to common suppositions, information on defendant-victim relationship and victim provocation was unrelated to sentence severity. Further research should examine judges' attempt to reduce uncertainty by relying on stereotypes and attributions linked to the likelihood of recidivism.
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