In 1978, the Social and Demographic Research Institute of the
University of Massachusetts, Amherst, received a grant from the
National Institute of Justice to undertake a comprehensive review
of the literature on weapons, crime, and violence in the United
States. The purpose of the project is best described as a "sifting
and winnowing" of the claims and counterclaims from both sides of
the Great American Gun War--the perennial struggle in Ameri-can
political life over what to do, if anything, about guns, about
violence, and about crime. The review and analysis of the available
studies consumed the better part of three years; the results of
this work are contained in this volume.
The intention of any review is to take stock of the available
fund of knowledge in some topical area. Under the Gun is no
different: our goal has been to glean from the volumes of previous
studies those facts that, in our view, seem firmly and certainly
established; those hypotheses that seem adequately supported by, or
at least approximately consistent with, the best available research
evidence; and those areas or topics about which, it seems, we need
to know a lot more than we do. One of our major conclusions can be
stated in advance: despite the large number of studies that have
been done, many critically important questions have not been
adequately researched, and some of them have not been examined at
all.
Much of the available research in the area of weapons and crime
has been done by advocates for one or another policy position. As a
consequence, the manifest intent of many "studies" is to persuade
rather than to inform. We have tried to approach the topic from a
purely agnostic point of view, treating as an open question what
policies should be enacted with regard to gun, or crime, control.
Thus, we have tried to judge each study on its own merits, on the
basis of the routine standards normally applied to
social-scientific research, and not on the basis of how effectively
it argues for a particular policy direction. It would, of course,
be presumptuous to claim that we have set aside all our own biases
in conducting this study. Whether or not our treatment is fair and
objective is clearly something for the reader, and not us, to
decide.
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