SOCIAL BACKGROUND AND THE SENTENCING BEHAVIOR OF JUDGES

This paper explores the extent to which the social background of judges affects their sentencing behavior. An analysis of data on felons convicted in Georgia suggests that background has little direct bearing on sentencing outcomes. Instead, it conditions the weight judges attach to legally relevant and social background factors. Expectations about the role of the judge's age, religion, prior prosecutorial experience, and local background received mixed support. Older judges were selectively more punitive than their younger colleagues, but they did not direct this punitiveness toward disadvantaged offenders. Nor was there evidence that male judges were paternalistic toward female offenders. Baptist and Fundamentalist judges also sentenced more punitively, but they were not more likely than other judges to discriminate against black or disadvantaged offenders. Rather, they appeared to hold white and older offenders to a higher standard of behavior. Former prosecutors were selectively punitive and applied the law more uniformly than nonprosecutors. Local judges appeared to be more responsive to public demands for incarceration and sentenced more particularistically. These results illustrate the importance of considering judicial background in conjunction with case attributes, and they underscore the need for research that increases our understanding of judicial background as a conditioner of differential treatment during sentencing.

[1]  S. Nagel Political Party Affiliation and Judges' Decisions , 1961, American Political Science Review.

[2]  T. Uhlman Black Elite Decision Making: The Case of Trial Judges , 1978 .

[3]  T. G. Walker,et al.  The Diversification of the Federal Bench: Policy and Process Ramifications , 1985, The Journal of Politics.

[4]  J. Schmidhauser Judicial Behavior and the Sectional Crisis of 1837-1860 , 1961, The Journal of Politics.

[5]  S. Ulmer Are Social Background Models Time-Bound? , 1986, American Political Science Review.

[6]  J. T. Kate,et al.  Individual Differences in Judicial Behavior: Personal Characteristics and Private Law Decision-Making , 1984 .

[7]  J. Hagan Law, Order and Sentencing: A Study of Attitude in Action , 1975 .

[8]  S. Welch,et al.  Sentencing: The Influence of Alternative Measures of Prior Record , 1984 .

[9]  J. Gibson From simplicity to complexity: The development of theory in the study of judicial behavior , 1983 .

[10]  C. Neal Tate,et al.  Personal Attribute Models of the Voting Behavior of U.S. Supreme Court Justices: Liberalism in Civil Liberties and Economics Decisions, 1946–1978 , 1981, American Political Science Review.

[11]  P. Allison Testing for Interaction in Multiple Regression , 1977, American Journal of Sociology.

[12]  J. Schmidhauser Stare Decisis, Dissent, and the Background of the Justices of the Supreme Court of the United States , 1962 .

[13]  S. Ulmer Social Background as an Indicator to the Votes of Supreme Court Justices in Criminal Cases: 1947-1956 Terms , 1973 .

[14]  John Hagan,et al.  Changing Conceptions of Race: Toward an Account of Anomalous Findings of Sentencing Research , 1984 .

[15]  Kenneth N. Vines Federal District Judges and Race Relations Cases in the South , 1964, The Journal of Politics.

[16]  S. Nagel Testing Relations Between Judicial Characteristics and Judicial Decision-Making , 1962 .

[17]  D. Adamany The Party Variable in Judges' Voting: Conceptual Notes and a Case Study , 1969, American Political Science Review.

[18]  H. Kritzer Political Correlates of the Behavior of Federal District Judges: A "Best Case" Analysis , 1978, The Journal of Politics.

[19]  J. Gibson Judges' Role Orientations, Attitudes, and Decisions: An Interactive Model , 1978, American Political Science Review.

[20]  Subhash C. Ray,et al.  Selection biases in sociological data , 1982 .

[21]  S. Goldman Voting Behavior on the United States Courts of Appeals Revisited , 1975, American Political Science Review.

[22]  J. Gibson Discriminant Functions, Role Orientations and Judicial Behavior: Theoretical and Methodological Linkages , 1977, The Journal of Politics.

[23]  J. Gibson ENVIRONMENTAL CONSTRAINTS ON THE BEHAVIOR OF JUDGES: A REPRESENTATIONAL MODEL OF JUDICIAL DECISION MAKING , 1980 .

[24]  Stanton Wheeler,et al.  Sentencing the White-Collar Offender: Rhetoric and Reality , 1982 .

[25]  R. Berk An introduction to sample selection bias in sociological data. , 1983 .

[26]  Eleanor C. Main,et al.  Social Backgrounds as Predictors of Votes On State Courts of Last Resort: the Case of Sex Discrimination , 1986 .

[27]  H. Kritzer,et al.  Sisterhood in the Courtroom: Sex of Judge and Defendant as Factors in Criminal Case Disposition: An Interdisciplinary Collection , 1977 .

[28]  J. Grossman Social Backgrounds and Judicial Decision-Making , 1966 .

[29]  C. Frazier,et al.  Effects of Court Officials on Sentence Severity: Do Judges Make a Difference? , 1982 .

[30]  J. Gibson RACE AS A DETERMINANT OF CRIMINAL SENTENCES: A METHODOLOGICAL CRITIQUE AND A CASE STUDY , 1978 .

[31]  Stuart S. Nagel,et al.  Judicial Backgrounds and Criminal Cases , 1962 .

[32]  S. Welch,et al.  Women as Policymakers: The Case of Trial Judges , 1981 .