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Working paper
Is Police Behavior Getting Worse? Data Selection and the Measurement of Policing Harms
In: University of Chicago Coase-Sandor Institute for Law & Economics Research Paper No. 865
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Sentence reductions and recidivism: lessons from the Bastille Day quasi experiment
This paper exploits the collective pardon granted to individuals incarcerated in French prisons on the 14th of July, 1996 (Bastille Day) to identify the effect of collective sentence reductions on recidivism. The collective pardon generated a very significant discontinuity in the relationship between the number of weeks of sentence reduction granted to inmates and their prospective date of release. We show that the same discontinuity exists in the relationship between recidivism probability five years after the release and prospective date of release. Overall, the Bastille Day quasi experiment suggests that collective sentence reductions increase recidivism and do not represent a cost-effective way to reduce incarceration rates or prisons' overcrowding.
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Sentence Reductions and Recidivism: Lessons from the Bastille Day Quasi Experiment
In: IZA Discussion Paper No. 3990
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Does Cash Bail Deter Misconduct?
In: George Mason Legal Studies Research Paper No. LS 19-08
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Working paper
Labor Mobility and the Problems of Modern Policing
In: NYU Law Review, Band 99, S. 128
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Systemic Failure To Appear in Court
In: University of Pennsylvania Law Review, Forthcoming
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