Margaret S. Kelley , N.R. Axton , C.G. Ellison , P.E. Gonzalez
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引用次数: 0
摘要
"红旗 "法律允许政府在法官认为枪支所有者对自己或他人构成危险的情况下从某人手中夺走枪支。我们介绍了这些法律的演变过程,然后利用 "美国生活中的枪支调查"(Guns in American Life Survey,GALS)的数据提出并验证了一系列假设。"美国生活中的枪支调查 "是 2018 年底为调查民意而开展的一项全国性在线调查。调查结果显示,认为自己认识 "有问题 "的枪支所有者(如危险、严重精神疾病或患有痴呆症)的成年人往往更支持红旗法律,从而缓和了枪支文化熏陶的影响。GALS 显示,政治基础并不能决定受访者的观点。但是,有两组与枪支相关的态度对红旗法案的态度具有很强的预测性--接受枪支对平民具有 "风险 "和危险性的科学证据,以及原则上反对枪支管制,认为这违反了宪法第二修正案。我们的研究结果表明,当地环境(知道某人是危险人物)可以压倒宏观社会态度形成的力量。最后,我们回顾了枪支政策应对措施是如何演变的,以及以前难以接受的方案是如何被立法者、执法人员、登记选民和普通公众等不同群体所接受的。
“I know it when I see it”: Public opinion on removing guns from compromised owners
“Red flag” laws allow the government to remove firearms from someone if a judge is persuaded that the owner is a danger to self or others. We present the evolution of these laws and then develop and test a series of hypotheses using data from the Guns in American Life Survey (GALS), a nationwide online survey conducted in late 2018 to investigate public opinion. Findings show that adults who believe they know a “compromised” gun owner (e.g. dangerous, seriously mentally ill or suffering dementia) tend to be much more supportive of red flag laws, moderating the effects of immersion in gun culture. GALS reveals that political underpinnings are not determinative of the views of respondents. However, two sets of gun-related attitudes are strongly predictive of attitudes towards red flag laws–acceptance of scientific evidence that guns are “risky” and dangerous for civilians and principled rejection of gun control as a violation of the Second Amendment. Our results suggest that local circumstances (knowing someone who is a danger) can overwhelm macro-social attitude formation forces. We conclude by reviewing how firearm policy responses evolve, and how previously unpalatable options can become accepted by different groups such as legislators, law enforcement, registered voters and the general public.
期刊介绍:
The International Journal of Law, Crime and Justice is an international and fully peer reviewed journal which welcomes high quality, theoretically informed papers on a wide range of fields linked to criminological research and analysis. It invites submissions relating to: Studies of crime and interpretations of forms and dimensions of criminality; Analyses of criminological debates and contested theoretical frameworks of criminological analysis; Research and analysis of criminal justice and penal policy and practices; Research and analysis of policing policies and policing forms and practices. We particularly welcome submissions relating to more recent and emerging areas of criminological enquiry including cyber-enabled crime, fraud-related crime, terrorism and hate crime.