Community inequality is conceptualized as a context that conditions differential treatment based on offender attributes and behavior. The analysis of data from Georgia supports such a conceptualization. Inequality tends to foster disproportionately harsher punishment of more dangerous and socially disadvantaged offenders. There are exceptions to these general trends, however. Most notably, white rather than black offenders are at a disadvantage in counties with high racial income inequality and large black populations. Taken as a whole, the results argue for greater attentiveness to the economic context within which sentencing occurs, and for research strategies that can specify the intervening mechanisms through which community inequality operates. (Publisher abstract)
Downloads
Similar Publications
- Traumatic Incidents and Experiences of Racism and Sexism: Examining Associations with Components of Critical Consciousness for System-Involved Girls of Color
- Prevalence of Perceived Racism and Discrimination Among US Children Aged 10 and 11 Years The Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study
- Suspended Again: The Racialized Consequences of a 9th Grade Suspension on Future Suspension Patterns