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Pleas,priors, and prison: Racial/ethnic differences in sentencing
Authors:Marjorie S Zatz
Affiliation:School of Justice Studies, Arizona State University USA
Abstract:Final case disposition and sentencing decisions for whites, blacks, and Chicanos are modeled with event-history data from the State of California. Dynamic analyses are used to link processing models and theories. The three-way interaction of (1) pleading guilty × (2) racial/ethnic group membership × (3) the extent of prior court experience on rates of moving through the legal system is assessed, controlling for other legitimate and nonlegitimate influences. In a jurisdiction handling large numbers of defendants representing diverse racial/ethnic and cultural groups under determinate sentencing, the timing of legal processing is shown to be critical. Results demonstrate that pleading guilty increases the speed of processing most when sentences do not involve incarceration, though this effect is not found for second or later arrests of Chicanos. Generally, theories of resource mobilization receive greater support than cultural stereotyping.
Keywords:Send requests for reprints to Marjorie S. Zatz   School of Justice Studies   Arizona State University   Tempe   AZ 85287.
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