Court Workforce Racial Diversity and Racial Justice in Criminal Case Outcomes in the United States, 2000-2005
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Ward, Geoff; Farrell, Amy; Rousseau, Danielle, 2009-06-25, "Court Workforce Racial Diversity and Racial Justice in Criminal Case Outcomes in the United States, 2000-2005", hdl:1902.2/25423 UNF:3:D1HHKMKYFE6uyvmS4LFHMQ== Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research [Distributor]
Study Global Idhdl:1902.2/25423
Other IDICPSR: 25423
AuthorsWard, Geoff (Northeastern University. College of Criminal Justice); Farrell, Amy (Northeastern University. College of Criminal Justice); Rousseau, Danielle (Northeastern University. College of Criminal Justice)
Production DatePlease see full citation.
Funding AgencyUnited States Department of Justice. National Institute of Justice
Grant Number2006-IJ-CX-0009
Distributor Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research (ICPSR), Institute for Social Research, University of Michigan
Distribution DateJune 25, 2009
Version2009-06-25, June 25, 2009
Provenance
Abstract and Scope
Abstract

The purpose of this study was to determine whether workgroup racial composition is related to sentence outcomes generally, and racial differences in sentencing in particular, across federal districts. This collection contains information on federal court district characteristics. Data include information about the social context, court context, and diversity of the courtroom workgroup for 90 federal judicial districts provided by 50 judicial district context variables.

Race and criminal sentencing research typically considers only the race of the criminal offender, crime victim, and general population to assess whether and how race influences sentencing and outcomes. Invisible in most accounts are the racial identities and group relations of court workers whose decisions ultimately shape case outcomes, and thus the race relations of sentencing. The purpose of this study was to determine whether workgroup racial composition is related to sentence outcomes generally, and racial differences in sentencing in particular, across federal districts.

This collection contains information on federal court district characteristics. Data include information about the social context, court context, and diversity of the courtroom workgroup for 90 federal judicial districts. Information on the social context of the judicial district was compiled using information from the 2000 Census and the 2000 Uniform Crime Reports (available through the FedStats system). Information specific to the court context including data on case processing, court workload information, demographics of each district, arrest data for each district, caseload, criminal case processing time, and proportion of district caseload for different types of crimes was obtained through the Federal Court Management Statistics and the Judicial Business of the United States Courts for 2000 and 2001, which are compiled annually by the Administrative Office of the United States Courts. Information on the racial demographics of federal court workgroups was collected by the principal investigators. Publicly available data on judge demographics and background was found at the Federal Judicial Center’s Biographical Directory of Federal Judges, information on the demographics of federal prosecutors was provided from FedStats, and data on the demographics of federal probation officers and defenders was provided by the Administrative Offices of the United States Trial Courts.

The dataset contains 50 judicial district context variables. More specifically, variables include district, population, proportion male/female judges in district, proportion White/Black/Hispanic judges in district, proportion male/female probation officers in district, proportion White/Black/Hispanic probation officers in district, proportion male/female prosecutors in district, proportion White/Black/Hispanic prosecutors in district, proportion male/female defenders in district, proportion White/Black/Hispanic defenders in district, proportion district population White/Black/Hispanic, departure rate for district, proportion district under 18 years of age, proportion of district over 65 years of age, proportion of district unemployed, proportion of district below poverty level, average filing time for district, violent offense rate for district, average felony finding per judge, proportion C felony finding, proportion F felony finding, proportion Black defendant for district. Other variables include Black workgroup (judge and prosecutors only), Black judge index, Black probation index, Black prosecutor index, Black defender index, Black workgroup index-original (judge + prosecutor), proportion of judges in district appointed by democratic/republican presidents, indicator that district is in southern region, female workgroup, full Black workgroup (judge, prosecutor, probation, and defender), and full workgroup index (judge, prosecutor, probation, defender).

Keywordscase processing (thesaurus); court cases (thesaurus); court system (thesaurus); courtroom proceedings (thesaurus); courts (thesaurus); district courts (thesaurus); federal courts (thesaurus); judicial decisions (thesaurus); justice (thesaurus); labor force (thesaurus); race (thesaurus); race relations (thesaurus); sentencing (thesaurus)
Topic ClassificationICPSR XVII.E. Social Institutions and Behavior, Crime and the Criminal Justice System (ICPSR subject classifications); MDRC I. Crime (MDRC subject classifications); NACJD IV. Court Case Processing (NACJD subject classifications)
Time Period Covered2000 - 2005
Date of Collection2007
Country/NationPlease see geographic coverage.
Geographic CoverageUnited States
Geographic Unitfederal criminal court district
Unit of Analysisfederal criminal court district
UniverseAll federal judicial districts in the United States between 2000 and 2005.
Kind of Dataaggregate data; census/enumeration data
Data Collection / Methodology
Data Set Availability
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