Interpreting the Empirical Evidence on Illegal Gun Market Dynamics

被引:0
|
作者
Anthony A. Braga
Garen J. Wintemute
Glenn L. Pierce
Philip J. Cook
Greg Ridgeway
机构
[1] Rutgers University,School of Criminal Justice
[2] Harvard University,Program in Criminal Justice Policy and Management
[3] University of California,Violence Prevention Research Program and Department of Emergency Medicine
[4] Northeastern University,School of Criminology and Criminal Justice
[5] Duke University,Sanford School of Public Policy
[6] RAND Corporation,undefined
来源
Journal of Urban Health | 2012年 / 89卷
关键词
Gun violence; Gun policy; Gun trafficking; Injury prevention;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Thousands of Americans are killed by gunfire each year, and hundreds of thousands more are injured or threatened with guns in robberies and assaults. The burden of gun violence in urban areas is particularly high. Critics suggest that the results of firearm trace data and gun trafficking investigation studies cannot be used to understand the illegal supply of guns to criminals and, therefore, that regulatory and enforcement efforts designed to disrupt illegal firearms markets are futile in addressing criminal access to firearms. In this paper, we present new data to address three key arguments used by skeptics to undermine research on illegal gun market dynamics. We find that criminals rely upon a diverse set of illegal diversion pathways to acquire guns, gun traffickers usually divert small numbers of guns, newer guns are diverted through close-to-retail diversions from legal firearms commerce, and that a diverse set of gun trafficking indicators are needed to identify and shut down gun trafficking pathways.
引用
收藏
页码:779 / 793
页数:14
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