Gun research faces roadblocks and a dearth of data
Does anybody here believe that preventing research on whether restrictive gun laws are an effective way to reduce gun crime is a good idea? Does anyone want to advocate for reduced data access and research?
Quote:
Buying a handgun in Connecticut means waiting lots of waiting. First comes an eight-hour safety course. Then picking up an application at a local police department. Review of the application (which includes a background check and fingerprinting) can take up to eight weeks. If approved, the state issues a temporary permit, which the buyer trades in at state police headquarters for a permanent one. Then its back to the store for the gun. Head west to Missouri, though, and buying a handgun is practically a cakewalk. Customers at Osage County Guns in Belle, Mo., for example, can walk into the store and walk out with a gun if they pass the FBIs instant background check, says John Dawson, the stores chief technical officer. ... Missouri and Connecticut have staked out opposite ends of the gun law spectrum. Connecticut didnt require handgun buyers to get a permit until 1995. Missouri had a tough law on the books, but repealed it in 2007. The states laws have flip-flopped, making for a fascinating natural experiment on gun laws effects on gun violence. The states had mirror image policy changes, and mirror image results, says Daniel Webster, a health policy researcher at Johns Hopkins University. ... The evidence is very suggestive, says Harvard University researcher David Hemenway. But its not extensive enough to persuade everyone or to move national policy. In fact, questions loom about the impact of all sorts of policies, from background checks to assault weapons bans to gun buybacks. Thats partly because gun research faces roadblocks at every turn: Scientists have to deal with data shutouts, slashed funding and, occasionally, harassment. |
via International Skeptics Forum http://ift.tt/20ytS42
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