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Attention Felons: Evaluating Project Safe Neighborhoods in Chicago

Fagan, Jeffery
June 4, 2015

Source: (2005) Columbia Public Law & Legal Theory Working Papers. Paper 0597.

This research uses a quasi-experimental design to evaluate the impact of Project
Safe Neighborhood (PSN) initiatives on neighborhood level crime rates in Chicago.
Four interventions are analyzed: (1) increased federal prosecutions for convicted
felons carrying or using guns, (2) the length of sentences associated with federal
prosecutions, (3) supply-side firearm policing activities, and (4) social marketing of deterrence and social norms messages through justice-style offender notification meetings. Using an individual growth curve models and propensity scores to adjust for non-random group assignment, our findings suggest that several PSN interventions are associated with greater declines of homicide in the treatment neighborhoods as compared to the control neighborhoods. The largest effect is associated with the offender notification meetings that stress individual deterrence, normative change in offender behavior, and increasing views on legitimacy and procedural justice. Possible competing hypotheses and directions for individual level analysis are also discussed. (author’s abstract)

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