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Journal Article

Citation

Loeffler CE, Grunwald B. J. Res. Crime Delinq. 2015; 52(6): 890-922.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2015, SAGE Publishing)

DOI

10.1177/0022427815581858

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

OBJECTIVES:Test whether processing non-transfer-eligible juvenile arrestees as adults has any effect on their likelihood of criminal recidivism.

METHODS:A regression discontinuity design is used to analyze the effect of processing juveniles as adults on a four-year felony rearrest measure using a sample of 78,142 felony drug arrests.

RESULTS:For the felony drug offenders in this sample, processing juveniles as adults reduced the probability of recidivism by 3 to 5 percent. Based on the rapid onset and limited change in size of these effects over the duration of a four-year follow-up as well as the concentration of the effect within a subpopulation having the least risk of incarceration, we attribute this finding to a combination of enhanced deterrence and incapacitation in the adult system.

CONCLUSIONS:Our results suggest that processing juveniles in the adult system may not uniformly increase offending and may reduce offending in some circumstances. Our findings also highlight the utility of quasi-experimental research designs for estimating the life-course effects of contact with the criminal justice system.


Language: en

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