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Fields Changed

Registration

Field Before After
Trial Status on_going completed
Last Published August 07, 2019 04:14 PM July 08, 2024 03:57 PM
Study Withdrawn No
Intervention Completion Date February 28, 2020
Data Collection Complete No
Was attrition correlated with treatment status? No
Final Sample Size: Total Number of Observations 606
Final Sample Size (or Number of Clusters) by Treatment Arms 311 in Control group, 295 in Treatment group
Is there a restricted access data set available on request? No
Program Files No
Is data available for public use? No
Keyword(s) Agriculture, Welfare Welfare
Building on Existing Work No
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Other Primary Investigators

Field Before After
Affiliation Columbia University
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Papers

Field Before After
Paper Abstract Court-related fines and fees are widely levied on criminal defendants who are frequently poor and have little capacity to pay. Such financial obligations may produce a criminalization of poverty, where later court involvement results not from crime but from an inability to meet the financial burdens of the legal process. We test this hypothesis using a randomized controlled trial of court-related fee relief for misdemeanor defendants in Oklahoma County, Oklahoma. We find that relief from fees does not affect new criminal charges, convictions, or jail bookings after 12 months. However, control respondents were subject to debt collection efforts at significantly higher rates that involved new warrants, additional court debt, tax refund garnishment, and referral to a private debt collector. Despite significant efforts at debt collection among those in the control group, payments to the court totaled less than 5 percent of outstanding debt. The evidence indicates that court debt charged to indigent defendants neither caused nor deterred new crime, and the government obtained little financial benefit. Yet, fines and fees contributed to a criminalization of low-income defendants, placing them at risk of ongoing court involvement through new warrants and debt collection.
Paper Citation Pager, Devah, Rebecca Goldstein, Helen Ho, and Bruce Western. "Criminalizing poverty: the consequences of court fees in a randomized experiment." American Sociological Review 87, no. 3 (2022): 529-553.
Paper URL https://doi.org/10.1177/00031224221075783
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