Hanging Down Under: Capital Punishment and Deterrence in Australia

O'Sullivan, Vincent Aidan (2018) Hanging Down Under: Capital Punishment and Deterrence in Australia. Working Paper. The Department of Economics, Lancaster.

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Abstract

Variation in executions and abolition of the death penalty by year and state in Australia was used to examine the deterrent effect of the death penalty on homicides. A dataset covering 1910-2010 was collected comprising homicide rates and controls for demographic and criminal justice features. Using OLS, there was no evidence that executions have a deterrent effect. There is some evidence of a deterrent effect of capital punishment laws, but the effect is no longer significant once demographic and criminal justice variables were added to the model. However, when using exogenous variation in party-political representation to address endogeneity issues, no evidence of a deterrent effect of capital punishment was found.

Item Type:
Monograph (Working Paper)
Subjects:
?? illegal behaviorenforcement of lawk42 ??
ID Code:
123870
Deposited By:
Deposited On:
06 Mar 2018 13:18
Refereed?:
No
Published?:
Published
Last Modified:
21 Nov 2024 01:50