2019
DOI: 10.1007/s11127-018-00629-5
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An empirical examination of institutions and cross-country incarceration rates

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Cited by 4 publications
(8 citation statements)
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“…Although police size non-significance cannot be explained by a focus on crime control vs. due process models, and is inconsistent with what was expected based on conflict theory or a systems perspective, these findings are consistent with some discussion and findings in the literature (D'Amico & Williamson, 2019;Kleck & Barnes, 2014;Ruddell & Thomas, 2009). When looking at the association between police force size on incarceration, their role may just be too removed from the final outcome/output, in case processing terms, to affect ultimate incarceration.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 38%
“…Although police size non-significance cannot be explained by a focus on crime control vs. due process models, and is inconsistent with what was expected based on conflict theory or a systems perspective, these findings are consistent with some discussion and findings in the literature (D'Amico & Williamson, 2019;Kleck & Barnes, 2014;Ruddell & Thomas, 2009). When looking at the association between police force size on incarceration, their role may just be too removed from the final outcome/output, in case processing terms, to affect ultimate incarceration.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 38%
“…Moreover, among different types of criminal activity, homicide is more likely to trigger the most severe form of state punishment and is therefore a conservative estimate of criminal behavior that leads to incarceration. As we note above, homicide rates are a common proxy for criminal behavior, and studies uniformly find a positive effect on incarceration rates (D’Amico and Williamson 2015, 2019a; DeMichele 2014; Jacobs and Kleban 2003; Neapolitan 2001; Ruddell and Urbina 2004, 2007; Sutton 2000, 2004). Thus, we argue that homicide rates are likely the single best measure to estimate the relationship between crime and incarceration.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…This is far greater than the corresponding cross‐national variation in crime rates, which suggests the importance of other factors for shaping the size of prison populations around the world (Ruddell and Urbina 2007). Nevertheless, studies usually include homicide rates in their models as a proxy for criminal behavior and uniformly find a positive effect on incarceration rates (D’Amico and Williamson 2015, 2019a; DeMichele 2014; Jacobs and Kleban 2003; Neapolitan 2001; Ruddell and Urbina 2004, 2007; Sutton 2000, 2004).…”
Section: The Criminological Kuznets Curvementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Studies have thus far evaluated these issues at the international and national levels. As D'Amico and Williamson (2019) outline in their examination of the issue, the results of these studies are mixed. Additionally, scholars have proposed that the rise of neoliberal institutions over the past several decades has resulted in increased crime and criminal activity, though empirical research has found either a negative or no significant relationship between economic freedom and crime (Bjørnskov 2015; Stringham and Levendis 2010).…”
Section: Literature Review and Theoretical Considerationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Importantly, while similar research has considered how a given jurisdiction's political, economic, or legal institutional environment might shape incarceration across countries (D'Amico and Williamson 2015, 2019) and across state's prison populations (Pfaff 2012), little has been done to address this question at the local level. We therefore contribute to these strands of the literature by looking specifically at MSA jail data (derived from county‐level data) across the United States between 1972 and 2017 and how economic freedom and institutional environments that promote economic opportunity and growth might influence such incarcerations.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%