Access
This paper assesses the effect of the creation of specialised intimate partner violence (IPV) courts on the reporting of IPV, and the incidence of IPV homicides in Spain. We find that the opening of a specialised IPV court increases the reporting of IPV by nearly 122 offences per 100,000 inhabitants, or 28% in the preferred specification. The rise in reporting is primarily driven by an increase in the reporting of moderate offences. We do not find conclusive evidence on the effects of specialised courts on IPV homicides.
Authors

Assistant Professor of Economics Universidad Autónoma de Madrid

Assistant Professor of Economics Universidad Autónoma de Madrid

PhD Enrichment Student
Carmen is a PhD candidate at the University of Warwick and an PhD researcher student at IFS. Youth development and crime are her areas of interest.
Journal article details
- DOI
- doi.org/10.1016/j.jpubeco.2024.105243
- Publisher
- Elsevier
- Issue
- Volume 239, Issue 105243, November 2024, pages 1-16
Suggested citation
J, García-Hombrados and M, Martínez-Matute and C, Villa . (2024). 'Specialised courts and the reporting of intimate partner violence: Evidence from Spain' 239(105243/2024), pp.1–16.
More from IFS
Understand this issue

Change in selected departmental capital budgets since 2007–08
The Ministry of Justice saw the biggest cuts to its capital budget over the 2010s, but then has seen the largest relative increases since.
11 February 2025

Rethinking the Education Maintenance Allowance: Lessons from a long-term analysis
This evidence should prompt us to look beyond simple financial incentives for classroom attendance.
10 March 2025
Policy analysis

Justice spending in England and Wales
We present the first consistent estimates of what has happened to Ministry of Justice funding since the early 2000s and put these changes in context.
11 February 2025

Real-terms Ministry of Justice resource (day-to-day) spending, 2002–03 to 2025–26
Day-to-day justice spending in 2025–26 is set to be no higher than it was 23 years earlier, and around 16% lower in per-person terms.
11 February 2025

Change in justice day-to-day spending and overall departmental day-to-day spending, in real terms, since 2002–03
The Ministry of Justice budget is set to be no higher in real terms than the equivalent budget in 2002–03.
11 February 2025
Academic research

The short- and long-run effects of paying disadvantaged teenagers to go to school
This working paper studies the long-run effect of a cash transfer to disadvantaged students on educational attainment, earnings and crime.
26 February 2025

Contagious animosity in the field: evidence from the federal criminal justice system
We investigate whether increased animosity toward Muslims after 9/11 had spillover effects on Black and Hispanic individuals in the federal criminal justice system.
1 July 2021

Financing local police spending in England and Wales: fiscal federalism in practice
Since 1995, police forces in England and Wales have been able to raise revenues locally to supplement grants from central government.
21 February 2020