Noncitizen Justice: The Criminal Case Processing of Non-US Citizens in Texas and California

IF 4.4 1区 社会学 Q1 SOCIOLOGY
Michael T. Light, Jason P Robey, Jungmyung Kim
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

Immigration enforcement is increasingly dependent on local criminal justice authorities, yet basic questions on the criminal case processing of non-US citizens (documented or undocumented) in state and local jurisdictions remain unanswered. Leveraging uniquely rich case information on all felony arrests in California and Texas between 2006 and 2018, this article provides a detailed examination of the legal treatment of non-US citizens from booking through sentencing. In both states, the authors find that non-US citizens arrested for the same crime and with the same prior record are significantly more likely to be convicted and incarcerated than US citizens. These citizenship gaps often exceed the observed disparities between white and minority defendants, but the results were not identical in both states. In line with the more rigid views toward migrant criminality in Texas, the case processing of non-US citizens is notably more severe there than in California at nearly every key decision point. These findings suggest that even in local criminal justice settings, citizenship is a unique and consequential axis of contemporary legal inequality.
非公民司法:得克萨斯州和加利福尼亚州非美国公民的刑事案件处理
移民执法越来越依赖于地方刑事司法当局,但在州和地方司法管辖区处理非美国公民(有证件或无证件)刑事案件的基本问题仍未得到解答。本文利用2006年至2018年间加利福尼亚州和得克萨斯州所有重罪逮捕的独特丰富的案件信息,详细审查了非美国公民从预订到判刑的法律待遇。在这两个州,作者发现,因同一罪行被捕且有相同前科的非美国公民比美国公民更有可能被定罪和监禁。这些公民身份差距往往超过了白人和少数族裔被告之间观察到的差距,但两个州的结果并不相同。与得克萨斯州对移民犯罪的更为刻板的看法一致,在几乎每个关键的决策点上,对非美国公民的案件处理都明显比加利福尼亚州更为严厉。这些发现表明,即使在地方刑事司法环境中,公民身份也是当代法律不平等的一个独特而重要的轴心。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.80
自引率
2.30%
发文量
103
期刊介绍: Established in 1895 as the first US scholarly journal in its field, the American Journal of Sociology (AJS) presents pathbreaking work from all areas of sociology, with an emphasis on theory building and innovative methods. AJS strives to speak to the general sociology reader and is open to contributions from across the social sciences—sociology, political science, economics, history, anthropology, and statistics—that seriously engage the sociological literature to forge new ways of understanding the social. AJS offers a substantial book review section that identifies the most salient work of both emerging and enduring scholars of social science. Commissioned review essays appear occasionally, offering readers a comparative, in-depth examination of prominent titles. Although AJS publishes a very small percentage of the papers submitted to it, a double-blind review process is available to all qualified submissions, making the journal a center for exchange and debate "behind" the printed page and contributing to the robustness of social science research in general.
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