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Debtors' Blocks: How Monetary Sanctions Make Between-neighborhood Racial and Economic Inequalities Worse.

Kate K O'NeillIan KennedyAlexes Harris
Published in: Sociology of race and ethnicity (Thousand Oaks, Calif.) (2021)
Although recent scholarship has enumerated many individual-level consequences of criminal legal citations and sentences involving fines and fees, we know surprisingly little about the structural consequences of monetary sanctions or legal financial obligations (LFOs). We use social disorganization and critical race theories to examine neighborhood-level associations between and among LFO sentence amounts, poverty, and racial and ethnic demographics. Using longitudinal data from the Washington State Administrative Office of the Courts, and the American Community Survey, we find LFOs are more burdensome in high-poverty communities and of color, and that per-capita rates of LFOs sentenced are associated with increased future poverty rates across all neighborhoods.
Keyphrases
  • mental health
  • healthcare
  • physical activity
  • cross sectional
  • african american
  • current status
  • big data
  • machine learning
  • young adults