Santaularia N Jeanie, Larson Ryan, Uggen Christopher
Division of Epidemiology and Community Health, 1300 2nd Street S, Minneapolis, MN, 55454, USA.
Minnesota Population Center, University of Minnesota, 225 19th Ave S #50th, Minneapolis, MN, 55455, USA.
Inj Epidemiol. 2021 Mar 15;8(1):11. doi: 10.1186/s40621-021-00303-3.
Violence is one of the leading causes of injury and death in the United States. One-way society attempts to eliminate violence is through criminal punishment. Yet, in many contexts, punishment fails to reduce violence and may cause other harms. Current research on violence often suffers from same-source bias which can produce spurious associations. This study assesses the associations of different forms of criminal punishment (monetary sanctions, incarceration, and probation) with violent injuries in two unique datasets.
This study examines a unique combination of hospital discharge data and court administrative data, two Minnesota county-level data sources. First, we assess the spatial distribution of the three criminal punishment variables and two violent injury variables, violent injury overall and violent injury in children by county from 2010 to 2014, using Moran's I statistic and Local Indicators of Spatial Autocorrelation. Then we assess the association of criminal punishment on violent injury and child abuse injury using a two-way fixed effects panel models.
Child abuse injuries are relatively rare in our data but are significantly concentrated geographically, unlike violent injuries which are more dispersed throughout Minnesota. Incarceration and probation are significantly geographically concentrated in similar regions while monetary sanctions are not geographically concentrated. We find a link between probation loads and violent injury, specifically, with a 1 day increase in per capita probation supervision associated with a 0.044 increase in violent injury incidence per 1000 people. In contrast, monetary sanctions and incarceration loads have little association with either violent injury or child abuse injury incidence.
Criminal punishment is intended to reduce harm in society, but many argue that it may bring unintended consequences such as violence. This study finds that county-level probation has a modest positive association with county-level violent injury rates, but monetary sanctions and incarceration are less associated with violence injury rates. No measure of criminal punishment was associated with a reduction in violence. This study addresses a gap in previous literature by examining the association of punishment and violence in two unrelated datasets. High rates of criminal punishment and violent injury are both urgent public health emergencies. Further individual-level investigation is needed to assess potential links.
暴力是美国受伤和死亡的主要原因之一。社会试图消除暴力的一种方式是通过刑事惩罚。然而,在许多情况下,惩罚未能减少暴力,还可能造成其他危害。当前关于暴力的研究常常存在同源偏差,这可能产生虚假关联。本研究在两个独特的数据集中评估了不同形式的刑事惩罚(金钱制裁、监禁和缓刑)与暴力伤害之间的关联。
本研究考察了明尼苏达州两个县级数据源——医院出院数据和法院行政数据的独特组合。首先,我们使用莫兰指数(Moran's I statistic)和局部空间自相关指标(Local Indicators of Spatial Autocorrelation),评估2010年至2014年三个刑事惩罚变量以及两个暴力伤害变量(总体暴力伤害和儿童暴力伤害)在各县的空间分布情况。然后,我们使用双向固定效应面板模型评估刑事惩罚与暴力伤害及虐待儿童伤害之间的关联。
在我们的数据中,虐待儿童伤害相对较少,但在地理上显著集中,这与暴力伤害不同,暴力伤害在明尼苏达州分布更为分散。监禁和缓刑在地理上显著集中于相似区域,而金钱制裁在地理上并不集中。我们发现缓刑负担与暴力伤害之间存在关联,具体而言,人均缓刑监督增加1天,每1000人的暴力伤害发生率就增加0.044。相比之下,金钱制裁和监禁负担与暴力伤害或虐待儿童伤害发生率几乎没有关联。
刑事惩罚旨在减少社会危害,但许多人认为它可能带来诸如暴力等意想不到的后果。本研究发现,县级缓刑与县级暴力伤害率之间存在适度的正相关,但金钱制裁和监禁与暴力伤害率的关联较小。没有任何刑事惩罚措施与暴力减少相关。本研究通过在两个不相关的数据集中考察惩罚与暴力之间的关联,填补了以往文献的空白。高刑事惩罚率和高暴力伤害率都是紧迫的公共卫生突发事件。需要进一步进行个体层面的调查来评估潜在联系。