Abstract
This Article focuses on the question, how should policymakers aiming to minimize the cost of sanctioning utilize legal and nonlegal sanctions when designing a system of criminal sanctions. After presenting the general economic case for the use of nonlegal sanctions the article turns to present a model of shaming, which unlike existing models, incorporates the endogenous effects of legal and nonlegal sanctions. This model demonstrates that tailoring an efficient regime that combines legal and nonlegal sanctions might be more difficult than previously perceived by law and economics scholars. A specific case study presented in this article is of the current trend in different jurisdictions in the United States to publicize the names of convicted sex offenders. The article will argue that such policies have limited preventative value, yet they might be justified as an efficient way to sanction sex offenders. Adopting such an approach towards these policies will, however, require a change of attitude towards them.
Disciplines
Criminal Law | Criminal Procedure | Economics | Law and Economics
Date of this Version
September 2004
Recommended Citation
Doron Teichman, "Sex, Shame, and the Law: An Economic Perspective on Megan's Law" (September 2004). University of Michigan Program in Law and Economics Archive: 2003-2009. Working Paper 26.
http://law.bepress.com/umichlwps-olin/art26
Included in
Criminal Law Commons, Criminal Procedure Commons, Economics Commons, Law and Economics Commons
