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Data on Firearms and Violence Too Weak to Settle Policy Debates
The national Academies of science ^ | Dec. 16, 2004

Posted on 01/02/2005 5:33:26 PM PST by bad company

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Data on Firearms and Violence Too Weak to Settle Policy Debates;

Comprehensive Research Effort Needed

WASHINGTON -- The role of guns in U.S. society is a subject of intense policy debate and disagreement. However, current research and data on firearms and violent crime are too weak to support strong conclusions about the effects of various measures to prevent and control gun violence, says a new report from the National Academies' National Research Council. A comprehensive research program on firearms is needed if criminal-justice and crime-prevention policy is to have a sound basis.

Some of today's most pressing policy issues in this area cannot be tackled with existing data and research methods, which are weak, the report says. For example:

-- There is no credible evidence that "right-to-carry" laws, which allow qualified adults to carry concealed handguns, either decrease or increase violent crime. To date, 34 states have enacted these laws.

-- There is almost no evidence that violence-prevention programs intended to steer children away from guns have had any effects on their behavior, knowledge, or attitudes regarding firearms. More than 80 such programs exist.

-- Research has found associations between gun availability and suicide with guns, but it does not show whether such associations reveal genuine patterns of cause and effect.

"Policy questions related to gun ownership and proposals for gun control touch on some of the most contentious issues in American politics: Should regulations restrict who may possess firearms? Should there be restrictions on the number or types of guns that can be purchased? Should safety locks be required? These and many related policy questions cannot be answered definitively because of large gaps in the existing science base," said Charles F. Wellford, professor, department of criminology and criminal justice, University of Maryland, College Park, and chair of the committee that wrote the report. "However, we do know what kind of data and research are needed to fill those gaps and, in turn, inform policy debates in a more meaningful way."

The study committee was not asked to address any issues of policy and did not do so. Rather, the committee evaluated the research base on firearms violence and on prevention, intervention, and control strategies. It also explored how new methods of merging scientific findings and data could inform strategies for reducing gun-related crime, suicide, and accidental fatalities. The federal government should support a robust research program in this area, concluded the committee.

Firearms, Criminal Violence, and Privacy Issues

Research linking firearms to criminal violence and suicide is seriously limited by a lack of credible information on who owns firearms and on individuals' encounters with violence, the report says. Moreover, many studies have methodological flaws or provide contradictory evidence; others do not determine whether gun ownership itself causes certain outcomes.

Assessing the potential of several ongoing national surveys to provide useful data on firearms should be a starting point, the report says. For instance, questions about gun use and access could be added to or fine-tuned in the Monitoring the Future project or the Youth Risk Behavior Survey. For research purposes, scientists also need appropriate access to federal and state data on gun use, manufacturing, and sales.

One of the largest barriers to better understanding gun violence is the lack of high-quality and extensive data on gun ownership and use. Some people have expressed concerns about expanding the government's data on gun ownership. Others have noted that some individuals -- especially those who use guns illegally -- will always be reluctant to disclose ownership information. Yet scientists in other fields, such as health care, have found effective ways to collect individual data on sensitive topics while protecting privacy. Research is needed -- and can indeed be done -- to determine whether ownership data can be accurately collected with minimal risk to legitimate privacy concerns, the report says.

Do Firearms Deter Crime?

Many Americans keep firearms to defend themselves against criminals, but research devoted to understanding the defensive and deterrent effects of guns has resulted in mixed and sometimes widely divergent findings, the report says. In addition, the accuracy of responses in gun-use surveys is a topic that has not been thoroughly investigated. The committee called for systematic research to define what is being measured in studies of defensive and deterrent effects of guns, to reduce reporting errors in national gun-use surveys, and to explore ways that different data sets may be linked to answer complex questions.

Likewise, new research tools are needed to evaluate right-to-carry laws. Existing studies that use similar methods and data yield very dissimilar findings. Some studies indicate that the laws reduce violent crime. Other studies show negligible effects, while still others suggest that they increase violent crime. It is impossible to draw any strong conclusions about their effects from these studies, the report says.

A Look at Interventions

Firearms are bought and sold in both formal markets, such as gun shops, and informal ones, such as the underground economy. Market-based interventions aimed at reducing criminals' access to guns include taxes on weapons and ammunition, limits on the number of firearms that can be purchased in a given time period, and gun "buy back" initiatives. Arguments for and against these approaches are largely based on speculation rather than scientific evidence. Data on gun markets -- on how many guns are sold through various channels, or how systematically background checks are performed, for instance -- are virtually nonexistent. Greater attention should be paid to research design and data needs regarding gun markets, the report says. More studies also should be conducted on potential links between firearms policies and suicide rates.

Programs created to prevent gun violence are common in the nation's public schools. However, the actual effects of particular programs on violence and injury rates are difficult to predict, the report says. Some studies suggest that children's curiosity and teenagers' attraction to risk make them resistant to the programs or that the projects actually increase the appeal of guns. But few programs have been adequately evaluated. Gun-safety technologies, such as trigger locks, also have been proposed as a way to prevent injuries. Yet how these technologies affect injury rates remains unknown. Government programs for prevention of firearm violence should include evaluation.

Available scientific evidence on how policing interventions and tougher sentencing policies affect firearms violence is both limited and mixed, the report adds. Several cities, including Boston and Richmond, Va., have implemented highly publicized programs designed to suppress crime and gun offenses. It is difficult to gauge the value of the measures because social and economic factors behind criminal acts are often complex and interwoven, and the efforts are narrow in scope. Without much better research, the benefits and costs of policing and sentencing interventions remain largely unknown.

Data limitations are immense in the study of firearms and violence, the committee emphasized. The report calls for the development of a National Violent Death Reporting System and a National Incident-Based Reporting System. No single data system can answer all questions about violent events, but it is important to start collecting accurate and reliable information that describes basic facts about violent injuries and deaths.

The report includes a dissenting opinion written by one committee member regarding the effects of right-to-carry laws on homicide rates, and a response by the committee.

The study was sponsored by the National Institute of Justice, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Joyce Foundation, Annie E. Casey Foundation, and the David and Lucile Packard Foundation. The National Research Council is the principal operating arm of the National Academy of Sciences and the National Academy of Engineering. It is a private, nonprofit institution that provides science and technology advice under a congressional charter. A committee roster follows.

Copies of Firearms and Violence: A Critical Review are available from the National Academies Press; tel. 202-334-3313 or 1-800-624-6242 or on the Internet at http://www.nap.edu. The cost of the report is $47.95 (prepaid) plus shipping charges of $4.50 for the first copy and $.95 for each additional copy. Reporters may obtain a copy from the Office of News and Public Information (contacts listed above).


TOPICS: Miscellaneous
KEYWORDS: bang; banglist; kennesaw; propaganda; rubish
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For years all they have been doing is devising studies and procuring information in a manner that supports the anti-gun agenda. (ie; compiling all the people killed with guns but not differentiating between people killed while commiting a crime and others) I won't hold my breath but it would be nice to see something resembling the scientific method (as per sir Francic Bacon) used.
1 posted on 01/02/2005 5:33:26 PM PST by bad company
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To: bad company

Hiddy Ho.......BC..


2 posted on 01/02/2005 5:37:11 PM PST by marmar (Even though I may look different then you...my blood runs red, white and blue.....)
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To: bad company

Someone should send those Poindexters a few copies of John Lott's "More Guns, Less Crime."


3 posted on 01/02/2005 5:39:29 PM PST by Prime Choice (No...my powers can only be used for Good.)
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To: marmar

Hi kiddo! Here I am still bangign that RKBA drum.


4 posted on 01/02/2005 5:39:59 PM PST by bad company (a conservative bases his politics on his morals,a lib bases his morals on his politics)
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Gun control doesn't reduce crime, violence, say studies

Lack of Data Leaves Effectiveness of Gun Control Effort a Mystery. 

Gun Control

Gun-grabbers Admit Guns Do Not Cause Violence (Aarg! My heart!)

Legal guns won't increase illegal gun violence

Minnesota CCW: Legal guns won't increase illegal gun violence

Guns and Violence - a good read.    Guns and violence        Guns and violence

Why wait to tackle gun violence? (MMM's Dees-Thomasas and MPPGV wants to ban PUMP ACTION GUNS)

Violence, Guns, and Drugs: A Cross-Country Analysis

Why I ..believe Guns Do Not Increase Violence (A Professor with some Common Sense..... )

Guns and Violence: Guns Aren't the Root of all Evil

5 posted on 01/02/2005 5:41:17 PM PST by Coleus (Let us pray for the 125,000 + victims of the tsunami and the 126,000 aborted Children killed daily)
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To: bad company

Pssst! Pssst! Ban crime, you IDIOTS!! ooops


6 posted on 01/02/2005 5:43:05 PM PST by Waco
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To: Prime Choice
Someone should send those Poindexters a few copies of John Lott's "More Guns, Less Crime."

That was just a start. We need more studies that compile information and draw a conclusion from the data, (like Lotts book) instead of all these studies that start with a conclusion and gather evidence to support it.

7 posted on 01/02/2005 5:44:17 PM PST by bad company (a conservative bases his politics on his morals,a lib bases his morals on his politics)
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To: bad company
What a HUGE pantload. Please send these jackasses this Armed and Secure link.
8 posted on 01/02/2005 5:44:51 PM PST by lodwick
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To: bad company

Ah yes, more government research is needed to tell us
that "...Shall not be infringed." has no meaning.


9 posted on 01/02/2005 5:46:31 PM PST by tet68 ( " We would not die in that man's company, that fears his fellowship to die with us...." Henry V.)
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To: bad company

Not a question of data.

Do we trust a government who doesn't trust us with guns?


10 posted on 01/02/2005 5:47:08 PM PST by secretagent
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To: bad company
There is no credible evidence that "right-to-carry" laws, which allow qualified adults to carry concealed handguns, either decrease or increase violent crime. To date, 34 states have enacted these laws.

Excuse me, but 34 states have instituted "right to carry" laws yet not one of them has reported an increase in crime.

11 posted on 01/02/2005 5:48:31 PM PST by Blood of Tyrants (God is not a Republican. But Satan is definitely a Democrat.)
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To: bad company
There are few things I despise more than dishonest scientists and/or scholars. This article is a prime example.
12 posted on 01/02/2005 5:50:55 PM PST by tarheelswamprat (Negotiations are the heroin of Westerners addicted to self-delusion.)
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To: Prime Choice
Absolutely.

Another good one is Guns and Violence: The English Experience, on the increase in gun crime in the UK after guns were banned (duh).

13 posted on 01/02/2005 5:50:59 PM PST by armed_and_ready
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To: bad company

I have nothing to contribute to the scientific study except these words "BACK OFF AND LEAVE THE 2ND AMENDMENT ALONE!"

Crime statistics and firearm ownership statistics have little correlation to each other except a firearm is occasionally used in a crime and criminals care little about gun laws.


14 posted on 01/02/2005 5:53:55 PM PST by o_zarkman44
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To: tarheelswamprat
There are few things I despise more than dishonest scientists and/or scholars. This article is a prime example.

It is nice that after 40 years of biased studies that someone finnaly realizes that they still don't know jack.

15 posted on 01/02/2005 5:55:33 PM PST by bad company (a conservative bases his politics on his morals,a lib bases his morals on his politics)
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To: bad company

The article is a moot point.

The 2cnd Amendment wasn't contigent on statistics, good or bad.


16 posted on 01/02/2005 5:57:48 PM PST by umgud
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To: bad company
See here also
17 posted on 01/02/2005 5:57:48 PM PST by Pharmboy (Listen...you can still hear the old media sobbing.)
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To: umgud
The 2cnd Amendment wasn't contigent on statistics, good or bad.

True, but public perception can dictate how difficult the legal/legislative battle is over the 2nd.

18 posted on 01/02/2005 6:01:35 PM PST by bad company (a conservative bases his politics on his morals,a lib bases his morals on his politics)
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To: armed_and_ready
Another good one is Guns and Violence: The English Experience, on the increase in gun crime in the UK after guns were banned...

So taken as a friendly amendment. Thanks!

19 posted on 01/02/2005 6:19:12 PM PST by Prime Choice (No...my powers can only be used for Good.)
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To: bad company

We need to remember the only requirement for employment at the Brady Center, the Million Moron March, the Violence Policy Center, and the other gun control advocacy grous is being a damned liar.


20 posted on 01/02/2005 6:24:50 PM PST by punster
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