RT Article T1 Ecological contributors to disparities in bond amounts and pretrial detention JF Crime & delinquency VO 63 IS 13 SP 1682 OP 1711 A1 Wooldredge, John A2 Frank, James A2 Goulette, Natalie LA English YR 2017 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/1577733800 AB Pretrial dispositions have been receiving greater attention in the literature on extralegal disparities in criminal case processing. We examined the relevance of areas in which crimes are committed for court decisions regarding bond amounts and whether suspects are ultimately detained prior to trial. A random sample of 2,677 persons charged with felony crimes committed in 820 blocks of a major urban U.S. jurisdiction was examined, with separate analyses of property, violent, and drug offenses. Defendants were more likely to be held in jail prior to trial when crimes were committed in more disadvantaged neighborhoods (higher percentages of female-headed households, vacant residences, renters, and African Americans). However, the odds of pretrial detention were also higher for defendants accused of crimes in less disadvantaged neighborhoods relative to their own. Evidence favors neighborhood composition as an important contributor to disparities in pretrial detention beyond individual factors such as a defendant’s race. K1 Disparities in case processing K1 Bond amount, K1 Pretrial detention K1 Neighborhood disadvantage K1 Untersuchungshaft K1 Kaution DO 10.1177/0011128716659636