What is it about?
Using a sample of 1417 criminal cases, this paper examines how suspended prison sentences may be utilized in Spain to encourage or coerce defendants into a guilty plea. In addition to more traditional regression analysis, covariates are controlled through an entropy balancing process.
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Why is it important?
The findings show defendants who agree a plea deal are indeed less likely to enter prison, which has profound implications for criminal justice in Spain and beyond. On the one hand, it appears plea bargaining is being used to improve the efficiency of the system and, thus, maintain its very existence. On the other hand, issues regarding false confessions and sentencing disparities are specifically highlighted.
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This page is a summary of: Suspended Sentences in Spain: An Alternative to Prison or a “Bargaining Chip” in Plea Negotiations?, European Journal of Crime Criminal Law and Criminal Justice, December 2020, Brill,
DOI: 10.1163/15718174-bja10010.
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