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Sentence severity and the drinking driver: Relationships with traffic safety outcome

โœ Scribed by Robert E. Mann; Evelyn R. Vingilis; Douglas Gavin; Edward Adlaf; Lise Anglin


Book ID
102978740
Publisher
Elsevier Science
Year
1991
Tongue
English
Weight
962 KB
Volume
23
Category
Article
ISSN
0001-4575

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โœฆ Synopsis


While a major response to the drinking-driving problem has been to increase penalties for drinking-driving offences, the impact of sentence severity on the driving behaviour of offenders (specific deterrence) remains unclear. In this research, relationships between aspects of sentence severity (license suspension, fine, jail term, assignment to probation, or temporary absence programmes) and postconviction accidents and drinking-driving convictions were examined, while controlling statistically for demographic and previous driving record factors. License suspensions were consistently associated with traffic safety benefits. However, increasing severity of other aspects of punishment seemed unrelated to outcome or was associated with increased traffic safety problems. As well, important differences between first, second, and multiple offenders were observed, which may be related to the impact of different aspects of sentence severity on driving behaviour.


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