"Americans have an abiding faith in punishment", asserts Anne Schneider
in her introduction of Deterrence and Juvenile Crime. Dr.
Schneider explores this "abiding faith" in her volume, overviewing past
assumptions that punishment or merely the threat of punishment
necessarily deters criminal behavior. She critically examines specific
deterrence theories and presents the methodology used in her own
research - research whose findings are often quite disruptive to those
assumptions held so long. Using data from six experimental studies in
U.S. cities, she finds that instilling a sense of citizenship is more
important in reducing future criminal behavior than enhancing the
certainty or severity of punishment. Beyond these results, the author
raises some pointed issues to explain why perceptions of certainty and
severity of punishment generally perform so inadequately in predicting
subsequent offenses. A comparison between incarceration methods and
community-based restitution programs, as well as the implications of
policy, comprise a thorough discussion which focuses on the future and
reflects upon the role of random experiments regarding issues of public
policy initiatives.