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Public Knowledge of Statutory Penalties - The Extent and Basis of Accurate Perception

NCJ Number
86523
Journal
Pacific Sociological Review Volume: 23 Issue: 1 Dated: (January 1980) Pages: 105-128
Author(s)
K R Williams; J P Gibbs; M L Erickson
Date Published
1980
Length
22 pages
Annotation
Statutory penalties may deter potential offenders from criminal activity, but any argument along that line entails assumptions about the public's knowledge of those penalties.
Abstract
Using survey data obtained from 2400 adults residents of Tucson, Arizona, this research examines perceptions of the applicability and the maximums of five types of penalties for nineteen types of crimes. Respondents do associate types of penalties (e.g., imprisonment) with types of crimes (e.g., murder), and their perceptions of statutory maximums (e.g., ten years imprisonment) are at least moderately correlated with the actual maximums stipulated in Arizona Criminal Code; but multivariate analyses suggest that those perceptions reflect public preferences as to appropriate sanctions for crimes and not necessarily actual knowledge of statutory penalties. (Author abstract)

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