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The Fall of Capital Punishment and the Rise of Prisons: How Punishment Severity Affects Jury Verdicts

Abstract
This paper studies the effect of punishment severity on jury decision-making using a large archival data set from the Old Bailey Criminal Court in London from 1715 to 1900. We take advantage of three natural experiments in English history, which result in sharp decreases in punishment severity: The offense specific abolition of capital punishment in the 1800s, the temporary halt of penal transportation during the American Revolution, and the abolition of transportation in 1853. Using a difference-in-differences design to study the abolition of the death penalty and pre-post designs to study the temporary and permanent halts to transportation, we find that decreasing expected punishment (especially via the end of the death penalty), had a large and significant impact on jury behavior, generally leading to the jury being ‘harsher’. Moreover, we find that the size of the effect differs with defendants’ gender and criminal history. These results raise concerns about the impartiality of juries as well as the implicit assumption often made when designing and evaluating criminal justice policies today – that the chance of conviction is independent of the harshness of the penalty.
Other description
JEL: H00, K14, K40, N00, N43, N93
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/2077/48462
Collections
  • Working papers
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gupea_2077_48462_1.pdf (1.266Mb)
Date
2016-10
Author
Bindler, Anna
Hjalmarsson, Randi
Keywords
jury
verdict
conviction
punishment severity
expected punishment
crime
death penalty
English history
Publication type
report
ISSN
1403-2465
Series/Report no.
Working Papers in Economics
674
Language
eng
Metadata
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