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Armed and considered dangerous

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TLDR
The most famous survey of criminal acquisition, possession, and use of guns is "Armed and Considered Dangerous" by Wright and Rossi as discussed by the authors, which is a book about "bad guys" and their guns.
Abstract
"Armed and Considered Dangerous" is a book about "bad guys" and their guns. But Wright and Rossi contend that for every suspected criminal who owns and abuses a firearm, a hundred or more average citizens own guns for sport, for recreation, for self-protection, and for other reasons generally regarded as appropriate or legitimate. "Armed and Considered Dangerous" is the most ambitious survey ever undertaken of criminal acquisition, possession, and use of guns.There are vast differences between the average gun owner and the average gun-abusing felon, but the analyses reported here do not suggest any obvious way to translate these differences into gun control policies. Most policy implications drawn from the book are negative in character: this will not work for this reason, that will not work for that reason, and so on. When experts are asked, "Okay, then what will work?" they usually fall back on the old warhorses of poverty, the drug problem, or the inadequate resources of the criminal justice system, and otherwise have little to say. This is not a failure of social science. It simply asks more of the data than the data were ever intended to provide.Several of Wright and Rossi's findings have become "coin of the realm" in the gun control debate, cited frequently by persons who have long since forgotten where the data came from or what their limitations are. Several other findings, including many that are important, have been largely ignored. Still other findings have been superseded by better and more recent data or rendered anachronistic by intervening events. With the inclusion of a new introduction detailing recent statistics and updated information this new edition of "Armed and Considered Dangerous" is a rich source of information for all interested in learning about weapon behavior and ownership in America.

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Journal ArticleDOI

The impact of gun control and gun ownership levels on violence rates

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors collected data from 170 U.S. cities with a population of at least 100,000 and coded the cities for the presence of 19 major categories of firearms restriction, including both state and city-level restrictions.
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Gun-related violence in and around inner-city schools.

TL;DR: Assessment of the degree to which inner-city high school students are victimized by threat of or actual firearm attack finds alteration of community social structure and culture appears to be the appropriate, although difficult, avenue of change for gun-related victimization levels.
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Firearms laws and the reduction of violence: A systematic review

TL;DR: The Task Force found the evidence available from identified studies was insufficient to determine the effectiveness of any of the firearms laws reviewed singly or in combination.
Journal ArticleDOI

Underground Gun Markets

TL;DR: In this article, an economic analysis of underground gun markets, drawing on interviews with gang members, gun dealers, professional thieves, prostitutes, police, public school security guards and teenagers in the city of Chicago, complemented by results from government surveys of recent arrestees in 22 cities, plus administrative data for suicides, homicides, robberies, arrests and confiscated crime guns.
Journal ArticleDOI

Does gun prevalence affect teen gun carrying after all

TL;DR: This article found that the likelihood of carrying a firearm increases with the prevalence of gun ownership in a given community, and that the propensity to carry other types of weapons is unrelated to the local prevalence of firearm ownership.