Race, Context, and Judging on the Courts of Appeals: Race-Based Panel Effects in Death Penalty Cases

IF 0.7 4区 社会学 Q3 Social Sciences Justice System Journal Pub Date : 2020-11-11 DOI:10.1080/0098261X.2020.1839823
Jonathan P. Kastellec
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Abstract This paper examines how the identities of judges on multimember courts interact with case context to influence judicial decision making. Specifically, I leverage variation in panel composition and defendant race to examine race-based panel effects in death penalty cases on the Courts of Appeals. Using a dataset that accounts for several characteristics of a defendant and his crime, I find that the assignment of a black judge to an otherwise all-nonblack panel substantially increases the probability that the panel will grant relief to a defendant on death row—but only in cases where the defendant is black. The size of the increase is substantively large: conditional on the defendant being black, a three-judge panel with a single African-American judge is about 23 percentage points more likely to grant relief than an all-nonblack panel. These results have important implications for assessing the role of racial diversity on the federal courts and contribute to the empirical literature on the application of the death penalty in the United States.
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种族、背景和上诉法院的判决:死刑案件中基于种族的专家组效应
摘要本文探讨了法官身份如何与案件语境相互作用,从而影响司法决策。具体而言,我利用小组组成和被告种族的差异来审查上诉法院死刑案件中基于种族的小组效应。我使用了一个包含被告及其罪行的几个特征的数据集,发现将一名黑人法官分配到一个由非黑人法官组成的小组中,大大增加了该小组对死囚牢区的被告给予救济的可能性——但仅限于被告是黑人的情况下。增幅相当大:在被告为黑人的条件下,一个由三名法官组成的陪审团,其中一名是非裔美国人法官,比一个全部由非黑人组成的陪审团批准救济的可能性高出约23个百分点。这些结果对评估种族多样性对联邦法院的作用具有重要意义,并有助于编写关于美国适用死刑的经验文献。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.90
自引率
14.30%
发文量
29
期刊介绍: The Justice System Journal is an interdisciplinary journal that publishes original research articles on all aspects of law, courts, court administration, judicial behavior, and the impact of all of these on public and social policy. Open as to methodological approaches, The Justice System Journal aims to use the latest in advanced social science research and analysis to bridge the gap between practicing and academic law, courts and politics communities. The Justice System Journal invites submission of original articles and research notes that are likely to be of interest to scholars and practitioners in the field of law, courts, and judicial administration, broadly defined. Articles may draw on a variety of research approaches in the social sciences. The journal does not publish articles devoted to extended analysis of legal doctrine such as a law review might publish, although short manuscripts analyzing cases or legal issues are welcome and will be considered for the Legal Notes section. The Justice System Journal was created in 1974 by the Institute for Court Management and is published under the auspices of the National Center for State Courts. The Justice System Journal features peer-reviewed research articles as well as reviews of important books in law and courts, and analytical research notes on some of the leading cases from state and federal courts. The journal periodically produces special issues that provide analysis of fundamental and timely issues on law and courts from both national and international perspectives.
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