M. Ouimet et P. Tremblay, A NORMATIVE THEORY OF THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN CRIME RATES AND IMPRISONMENT RATES - AN ANALYSIS OF THE PENAL BEHAVIOR OF US STATES FROM 1972 TO 1992, Journal of research in crime and delinquency, 33(1), 1996, pp. 109-125
In this study the authors regressed state imprisonment rates on three
crime rates (homicide, robbery, burglary) at three points in time (197
2, 1982 and 1992). They show that stares that experience higher crime
rates have higher imprisonment levels at all three periods. The author
s also show that a basic pattern governing imprisonment trends is dete
rmined by the states' relative punitiveness scores: States found to be
overpunitive, given their crime rates, tend to increase their impriso
nment rate at a lower rate than other stares. Conversely, states found
to be underpunitive tend to increase their imprisonment rate in subse
quent years at a faster pace than others.