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Conviction, Incarceration, and Recidivism: Understanding the Revolving Door

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Listed:
  • John Eric Humphries
  • Aurelie Ouss
  • Kamelia Stavreva
  • Megan T. Stevenson
  • Winnie van Dijk

Abstract

Noncarceral conviction is a common outcome of criminal court cases: for every individual incarcerated, there are approximately three who are recently convicted but not sentenced to prison or jail. We develop an empirical framework for studying the consequences of noncarceral conviction by extending the binary-treatment judge IV framework to settings with multiple treatments. We outline assumptions under which widely-used 2SLS regressions recover margin-specific treatment effects, relate these assumptions to models of judge decision-making, and derive an expression that provides intuition about the direction and magnitude of asymptotic bias when they are not met. Under the identifying assumptions, we find that noncarceral conviction (relative to dismissal) leads to a large and long-lasting increase in recidivism for felony defendants in Virginia. In contrast, incarceration relative to noncarceral conviction leads to a short-run reduction in recidivism, consistent with incapacitation. While the identifying assumptions include a strong restriction on judge decision-making, we argue that any bias resulting from its failure is unlikely to change our qualitative conclusions. Lastly, we introduce an alternative empirical strategy, and find that it yields similar estimates. Collectively, these results suggest that noncarceral felony conviction is an important and potentially overlooked driver of recidivism.

Suggested Citation

  • John Eric Humphries & Aurelie Ouss & Kamelia Stavreva & Megan T. Stevenson & Winnie van Dijk, 2024. "Conviction, Incarceration, and Recidivism: Understanding the Revolving Door," NBER Working Papers 32894, National Bureau of Economic Research, Inc.
  • Handle: RePEc:nbr:nberwo:32894
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    JEL classification:

    • J0 - Labor and Demographic Economics - - General
    • K4 - Law and Economics - - Legal Procedure, the Legal System, and Illegal Behavior

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