EconBiz - Find Economic Literature
    • Logout
    • Change account settings
  • A-Z
  • Beta
  • About EconBiz
  • News
  • Thesaurus (STW)
  • Academic Skills
  • Help
  •  My account 
    • Logout
    • Change account settings
  • Login
EconBiz - Find Economic Literature
Publications Events
Search options
Advanced Search history
My EconBiz
Favorites Loans Reservations Fines
    You are here:
  • Home
  • Search: subject:"Federal Sentencing Guidelines Zero-inflated negative binomial random effect model"
Narrow search

Narrow search

Year of publication
Subject
All
Federal Sentencing Guidelines Zero-inflated negative binomial random effect model 2 Interjudge sentencing disparity 2
Type of publication
All
Book / Working Paper 2
Language
All
Undetermined 2
Author
All
Anderson, James M. 2 Kling, Jeffrey R. 2 Stith, Kate 2
Institution
All
Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs, Princeton University 2
Published in...
All
Working Papers / Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs, Princeton University 2
Source
All
RePEc 2
Showing 1 - 2 of 2
Cover Image
Measuring Inter-judge Sentencing Disparity Before and After the Federal Sentencing Guidelines
Anderson, James M.; Kling, Jeffrey R.; Stith, Kate - Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International … - 1998
This paper evaluates the impact of the Federal Sentencing Guidelines on inter-judge sentencing disparity, which is defined as the differences in average nominal prison sentence lengths for comparable caseloads assigned to different judges. This disparity is measured as the dispersion of a random...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10005435965
Saved in:
Cover Image
Measuring Inter-judge Sentencing Disparity Before and After the Federal Sentencing Guidelines
Anderson, James M.; Kling, Jeffrey R.; Stith, Kate - Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International … - 1998
This paper evaluates the impact of the Federal Sentencing Guidelines on inter-judge sentencing disparity, which is defined as the differences in average nominal prison sentence lengths for comparable caseloads assigned to different judges. This disparity is measured as the dispersion of a random...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10010928197
Saved in:
A service of the
zbw
  • Sitemap
  • Plain language
  • Accessibility
  • Contact us
  • Imprint
  • Privacy

Loading...