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Encyclopedia > Guns and crime

In some countries such as the United States, the amount of regulation that governments should impose on firearms is controversial. One major point in the argument is the positive or negative correlation that many argue exist between crime, especially violent crime, and gun ownership. Both sides actively debate the relevance of gun laws and self-defense in modern society. The phrase Gun politics refers to the views of different people within a particular country as to what degree of control (increased gun rights vs. ...


Some scholars, notably John Lott, claim to have discovered a positive correlation between gun control legislation and crimes in which criminals confront citizens. Robert Ehrlich, in his book Nine Crazy Ideas in Science (ISBN 0691094950), examines this issue in Chapter 2, "More Guns Means Less Crime". He revisits John Lott's original data and concludes that the data was somewhat manipulated to "prove" a point. For example, many graphs are fits to the data and do not show the data itself. The raw data does not support Lott's thesis the way the fitted graph did. Ehrlich's conclusion is that more guns does not mean less crime, though it does not necessarily mean more crime either. John R. Lott Jr. ... for other uses please see Crime (disambiguation) A crime is an act that violates a political or moral law. ...


Worthy of note, however, is that those who seek to ban guns, and the defensive use of them, have never managed to prove any correlation of reduced gun crime with tighter gun laws.


A European example would be to compare the violent crime levels between the United Kingdom which has very strict rules against gun ownership and self-defense and Switzerland which has widespread private gun ownership and which maintains the right to self-defense. According to Interpol data, in 2002, homicides were significantly more prevalent (2.91 vs 2.01 per 100,000 inhabitants) in Switzerland than in England and Wales [1] (http://www.interpol.int/Public/Statistics/ICS/2002/switzerland2002.pdf) [2] (http://www.interpol.int/Public/Statistics/ICS/2002/UKEnglandWales2002.pdf). This would seem to indicate a positive correlation between gun ownership and crime. Such a comparison between only two countries, however, is quite meaningless: many other factors may come into play except for firearm legislation. As an element of comparison, in 2001 the homicide rate for the United States of America was 5.91 per 100,000 [3] (http://www.interpol.int/Public/Statistics/ICS/2001/usa2001.pdf). World map showing location of Europe A satellite composite image of Europe Europe is geologically and geographically a peninsula, forming the westernmost part of Eurasia. ... Self-defense usually refers to the use of violence to protect oneself and is a possible justification for this otherwise illegal act. ... This article is about the International Criminal Police Organization - Interpol. ... 2002 is a common year starting on Tuesday of the Gregorian calendar. ... 2001 is a common year starting on Monday of the Gregorian calendar. ...


Further, the firearms crime rate in the United Kingdom has dramatically increased since an almost total ban on handguns in 1997/8, with violent gun crimes, including shootings to death, increasing at around 40% year on year, despite otherwise reducing crime levels (or at least, a reduction in crime reporting for non-violent crime), and this would point to a negative correlation betwenn more restrictive gun laws and violent crimes involving firearms.


Another example is Japan, which has strict rules about gun ownership and a low crime rate. Only those at the top of the criminal tree have firearms, and the general public are banned from owning anything with a power of more than 1 joule. (Japan invented Airsoft for this reason.) Airsoft is a military simulation sport somewhat similar in nature to paintball, in which players participate in mock combat with military-style mock weapons and tactics. ...


The 1993 US Brady Bill is an example of a gun control law that has been generally correlated with a decrease, not an increase, in overall crime levels. Critics argue that the reduction was more driven by improving economic and other factors than by the gun control regulations. Because the Brady Bill was a national law, the measurement of its results must be treated as a single sample. That is, it has no more nor less weight than the findings after a change in the laws of a single state or municipality. The Brady Handgun Violence Prevention Act, also known as the Brady Bill, was passed by Congress and signed into law by President Bill Clinton on November 30, 1993. ...


Conversely, the federal Assault Weapon Ban, which recently sunseted, lead to no obvious change in firearms crime rates during it's ten year run, and no statistics are currently available to show if the removal of this ban has any effect.


See gun politics. The phrase Gun politics refers to the views of different people within a particular country as to what degree of control (increased gun rights vs. ...


  Results from FactBites:
 
Guns and crime - Biocrawler (533 words)
Worthy of note, however, is that those who seek to ban guns, and the defensive use of them, have never managed to prove any correlation of reduced gun crime with tighter gun laws.
A European example would be to compare the violent crime levels between the United Kingdom which has very strict rules against gun ownership and self-defense and Switzerland which has widespread private gun ownership and which maintains the right to self-defense.
The 1993 US Brady Bill is an example of a gun control law that has been generally correlated with a decrease, not an increase, in overall crime levels.
Guns and crime: the great debate -- Page 1 -- Times Union - Albany NY (598 words)
According to a University at Albany publication of 2001 FBI statistics, the most recent available, the percentage of violent crimes committed with guns in New York state was virtually the same as in Montana -- 17.7 percent in New York and 17.4 percent in Montana.
The same is true for other states: Colorado and Connecticut, for example, have gun laws as different as New York's from Montana's, but they have about the same percentage of violent crime committed with guns.
Statistics show no clear relationship between strict gun laws and the rate of gun crimes -- a fact that raises questions about the politically charged debate over gun control as a means of combating crime.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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