Guns and Crime

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2nd amendment
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Assault Weapons Bans
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Brady Act
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criminology research
Defensive Firearm
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empirical study of gun legislation
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Federal Assault Weapons Ban
Federal Gun Control Law
firearm policy analysis
Fixed Effects Tobit Model
Gun Control
Gun Control Laws
Gun Control Measures
gun control policy
Gun Ownership
Gun Ownership Rates
gun violence
homicide data interpretation
Justifiable Homicides
Language_English
Large Capacity Magazines
Mass Shootings
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Public Mass Shootings
public safety statistics
quantitative criminology
Reduce Firearm Violence
Self-protective Behaviors
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social science methodology
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State Level Data
SYG Law
Unintentional Deaths

Product details

  • ISBN 9781498780384
  • Weight: 300g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 25 Oct 2016
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
  • Language: English
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Guns and Crime: The Data Don’t Lie investigates the ways in which the current data on guns and crime are inadequate and inaccurate. Although the majority of murders in the United States are committed with guns, research on gun ownership, the supply of guns, and the relationship between guns and crime is less thorough than studies done for many other aspects of public safety policy. This book explores the weaknesses in current findings, and extrapolates the implications of policymaking based on these faulty foundations.

As the gun debate continues to rage in North America, this text offers a cautionary voice to the discourse—before practitioners and policy makers can create a solution to gun violence, they must first improve the quality of the facts they use to make their case. Intended for criminology, statistics, sociology, and economics students, Guns and Crime is also suitable for interested laypersons and practitioners hoping to better understand the mythos surrounding guns in America.

Mark Gius is a Professor of Economics at Quinnipiac University in Hamden, Connecticut. He earned his Ph.D. in Economics from the Pennsylvania State University. His teaching interests are labor economics, law and economics, and industrial organization. His main area of research interest is applied microeconomics with an emphasis on public policy research. His research has appeared in the Social Science Journal, Applied Economics, and Applied Economic Letters.

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