LEADER 04975cmm a2200949 4500001 99102459603506421 005 20201008170826.0 006 m f a u 007 cr mn mmmmuuuu 008 170403s2017 miu f a eng d 035 |9(ICPSR)ICPSR34939 035 (NjP)10245960-princetondb 035 |z(NjP)Voyager10245960 040 MiAaI |cMiAaI 090 Electronic Resource 245 00 How Justice Systems Realign in California |h[electronic resource] : |bThe Policies and Systemic Effects of Prison Downsizing, 1978-2013 |cJoan Petersilia, Robert Weisberg 250 2017-03-30 260 Ann Arbor, Mich. : |bInter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research [distributor], |c2017 490 1 ICPSR ; |v34939 516 Numeric 538 Mode of access: Intranet. 500 Title from ICPSR DDI metadata of 2017-04-03. 536 United States Department of Justice. Office of Justice Programs. National Institute of Justice |c2012-IJ-CX-0002 506 AVAILABLE. This study is freely available to the general public. 530 Also available as downloadable files. 522 California 522 United States 520 3 These data are part of NACJD's Fast Track Release and are distributed as they there received from the data depositor. The files have been zipped by NACJD for release, but not checked or processed except of the removal of direct identifiers. Users should refer to the accompany readme file for a brief description of the files available with this collections and consult the investigator(s) if further information is needed. The California correctional system underwent a dramatic transformation under California's Public Safety Realignment Act (AB 109) in 2011, a law that shifted from the state to the counties the responsibility for monitoring, tracking, and incarcerating lower level offenders previously bound for state prison. Realignment, therefore, presents the opportunity to witness 58 natural experiments in the downsizing of prisons. Counties faced different types of offenders, implemented different programs in different community and jail environments, and adopted differing sanctioning policies. This study examines the California's Public Safety Realignment Act's effect on counties' criminal justice institutions, including the disparities that result in charging, sentencing, and resource decisions. Cf: http://doi.org/10.3886/ICPSR34939 505 0 |tDataset 567 California counties. Police, sheriffs, judges, prosecutors, defense attorneys, probation and parole agents, victim advocates, offenders, and social service representatives in the criminal justice institutions in California. 650 7 budgets |2icpsr 650 7 correctional facilities |2icpsr 650 7 correctional guards |2icpsr 650 7 correctional officers |2icpsr 650 7 correctional system |2icpsr 650 7 corrections management |2icpsr 650 7 court system |2icpsr 650 7 courts |2icpsr 650 7 crime statistics |2icpsr 650 7 criminal courts |2icpsr 650 7 criminal justice policy |2icpsr 650 7 criminal justice system |2icpsr 650 7 district attorneys |2icpsr 650 7 economic conditions |2icpsr 650 7 expenditures |2icpsr 650 7 jail inmates |2icpsr 650 7 jails |2icpsr 650 7 judges |2icpsr 650 7 judicial decision making |2icpsr 650 7 judicial decisions |2icpsr 650 7 law enforcement |2icpsr 650 7 law enforcement agencies |2icpsr 650 7 nonviolent crime |2icpsr 650 7 offenders |2icpsr 650 7 offenders sentencing |2icpsr 650 7 parole |2icpsr 650 7 parole hearings |2icpsr 650 7 police |2icpsr 650 7 police departments |2icpsr 650 7 police social services |2icpsr 650 7 police training |2icpsr 650 7 political affiliation |2icpsr 650 7 political expectations |2icpsr 650 7 prison administration |2icpsr 650 7 prison construction |2icpsr 650 7 prison inmates |2icpsr 650 7 sentencing |2icpsr 650 7 sentencing guidelines |2icpsr 650 7 social expenditures |2icpsr 650 7 social services |2icpsr 650 7 voter preferences |2icpsr 653 0 ICPSR XVII.E. Social Institutions and Behavior, Crime and the Criminal Justice System 653 0 NACJD XVI. Fast Release 653 0 NACJD VI. Criminal Justice System 653 0 NACJD IV. Court Case Processing 653 0 NACJD V. Courts 653 0 NACJD III. Corrections 700 1 Petersilia, Joan |uStanford Law School 700 1 Weisberg, Robert |uStanford Law School 710 2 Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research. |0http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n79141035 830 0 ICPSR ; |v34939 902 jwl |bz |6m |7m |dw |f0 |e20170522