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Gun Control - What Australia got right (and wrong) (Paperback)
Loot Price: R967
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Gun Control - What Australia got right (and wrong) (Paperback)
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In the aftermath of the Port Arthur massacre on 28 April 1996 -
when a gunman killed 35 people and seriously wounded another 21 in
a quiet town in Tasmania - John Howard, a conservative prime
minister who had been in office for just six weeks, moved swiftly
to revolutionise Australia's gun control laws. The National
Firearms Agreement, produced just twelve days after the massacre,
with support from all levels of government and across the
Australian political divide, but derided by Howard's natural
political allies in the US, is now held up around the world as a
model for gun control. Gun Control draws on interviews with those
who supported and opposed the new laws, and asks whether the
aftermath of the tragedy might have been a lost opportunity to
achieve much more than simply preventing a repeat of Port Arthur -
vitally important though that was. Tom Frame argues that the
mechanisms for amending national firearms agreement are in need of
substantial revision alongside the agreement itself. Frame analyses
whether the Australian Government achieved its intention, and what
it might have done in response to the massacre, and didn't. The
book also traces the history of Australian gun usage and control,
and compares this with the US experience.
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