National Academy of Sciences And Justice Deptment Reports
Find No Benefits To Restricting Ownership of Firearms January 1, 2005 While anti-gunners consider it an article of faith that
government restrictions on firearms reduces violence and crime,
two new U.S. studies could find no evidence to support such a conclusion.
The National
Academy of Sciences issued a 328-page report, Firearms
and Violence: A Critical Review, based on 253 journal articles,
99 books, 43 government publications, a survey of 80 different gun-control
laws and some of its own independent study. In short, the panel
could find no link between restrictions on gun ownership and lower
rates of crime, firearms violence or even accidents with guns. The
U.S. DOJ made similar findings.
The panel was established during the Clinton administration and
all but one of its members were known to favor gun control.
"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 in the department of criminology and criminal
justice at the University of Maryland and chairman of the committee
that wrote the report.
However, the National Research Council decided even more thorough
research on the topic is needed.
Many studies linking guns to suicide and criminal violence produce
conflicting conclusions, have statistical flaws and often do not
show whether gun ownership results in certain outcomes, the report
said.
A serious limit in such analyses is the lack of good data on who
owns firearms and on individual encounters with violence, according
to the study.
The report noted that many schools have programs intended to prevent
gun violence. However, it added, 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.
Few of these programs, the report concludes, have been adequately
evaluated.
The report calls for the development of a National Violent Death
Reporting System and a National Incident-Based Reporting System
to begin collecting data.
The study by the Research Council, the operating arm of the National
Academy of Science, 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.
"While more research is always helpful, the notion that we
have learned nothing flies in the face of common sense," said
John Lott, resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute
and a critic of gun-control laws. "The NAS panel should have
concluded as the existing research has: Gun control doesn't help."
Meanwhile, a study released by the Justice Department suggesting
background checks at gun shows would do little to keep firearms
out of the hands of criminals.
The study noted the number of criminals who obtained guns from
retail outlets was dwarfed by the number of those who picked up
their arms through means other than legal purchases. The report
was the result of interviews with more than 18,000 state and federal
inmates conducted nationwide. It found that nearly 80 percent of
those interviewed got their guns from friends or family members,
or on the street through illegal purchases.
Less than 9 percent were bought at retail outlets and only seven-tenths
of 1 percent came from gun shows.
The Justice Department's interviews also showed so-called "assault
weapons" are not a major cause of gun violence. Only about
8 percent of the inmates used one of the models covered in the now-expired
assault weapons ban, signed into law by the Clinton administration
in 1994.
Both of these studies come in the wake of a Center
for Disease Control Study, which also found no evidence supporting
gun control laws.