Early Releases and Recidivism
Abstract
Does an early release increase or decrease the probability that ex-convicts go backto prison? We exploit variation in parole decisions due to grumpy judges to examine
this question. We use data from Israeli parole requests where the court appearance of a
prisoner throughout the day provides a natural experiment. We first show that judges
more often deny parole requests of prisoners appearing later. We then use this variation
in instrumental variable estimations. Early releases reduce the propensity of prisoners to
go back to prison. Our robustness checks suggest that later and earlier cases are largely
comparable and that potential selection is unlikely to explain our results.