RT Article T1 A survival model of pretrial failure JF Journal of quantitative criminology VO 6 IS 2 SP 153 OP 184 A1 Visher, Christy A. A2 Linster, Richard L. LA English YR 1990 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/1767142862 AB This paper examines the likelihood of rearrest during the pretrial period with a model that depends on both time elapsed since release and on individual and case characteristics. Using data on a sample of male arrestees released on recognizance in the District of Columbia in 1984, we apply a survival or hazard model to the problem of “predicting” pretrial rearrest. We are particularly interested in whether drug use, as measured by urinalysis at arrest, is predictive of pretrial rearrest and its timing. Results show, for example, that drug use or a charge for larceny is associated with high risk levels in the period immediately following release. In our data, the number of prior convictions exerts a strong effect on rearrest risk throughout the pretrial period, but the initial high risk associated with being on probation or parole or having pending charges decreases rapidly over the course of a year at risk. K1 Drug use K1 Recidivism K1 pretrial failure K1 Hazard Rate K1 survival model DO 10.1007/BF01065849