The Deterrent Effect of Capital Punishment: An Analysis of Daily Homicide Counts
- 1 June 1990
- journal article
- research article
- Published by JSTOR in Journal of the American Statistical Association
- Vol. 85 (410) , 295
- https://doi.org/10.2307/2289764
Abstract
This article analyzes daily homicide data to address whether the occurrence of executions exerts a short-term deterrent effect. The data analyzed are drawn from computerized death certificates from California during the early 1960s, the last period during which frequent executions were carried out there. The analysis of data from one legal jurisdiction helps overcome criticisms of earlier studies based on data aggregated over executing and nonexecuting jurisdictions. Furthermore, the detailed information in the death certificates allows one to analyze the murders of victims of different race and sex separately, which in principle should allow one to detect possible race- or gender-specific effects too small to be discerned in aggregate data. Poisson and compound-Poisson regression models are estimated, to control for seasonal fluctuations and to measure the effect of executions on daily homicide counts. Two-week and four-week periods surrounding the dates on which executions took place are examin...Keywords
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