Difference between revisions of "Gun control"

From Issuepedia
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(moving US-specific stuff to subpage, so this page can be more about comparing national strategies)
(better wording)
 
(One intermediate revision by the same user not shown)
Line 5: Line 5:
 
</hide>
 
</hide>
 
==About==
 
==About==
[[Gun control]] refers generally to the idea of restricting and monitoring public access to firearms in order to reduce illicit usage.
+
[[Gun control]] refers generally to the idea of restricting and monitoring public access to firearms in order to minimize the public hazard they present.
  
 
This issue is handled very differently in various countries worldwide:
 
This issue is handled very differently in various countries worldwide:
 
* {{l/sub|China}}
 
* {{l/sub|China}}
 
* {{l/sub|Japan}}
 
* {{l/sub|Japan}}
* {{l/sub|Switzerland}}
+
* {{l/sub|Switzerland}}: see [[cwre:Irrelevancies/Switzerland has high gun ownership and low gun crime]]
 
* [[/UK|United Kingdom]]
 
* [[/UK|United Kingdom]]
 
* [[/US|United States]]: gun violence is high, but gun advocates (often fueled by industry groups) argue that access is a [[US Constitution|Constitutional]] right
 
* [[/US|United States]]: gun violence is high, but gun advocates (often fueled by industry groups) argue that access is a [[US Constitution|Constitutional]] right
 +
 
==Links==
 
==Links==
 
===Reference===
 
===Reference===

Latest revision as of 01:37, 7 August 2015

About

Gun control refers generally to the idea of restricting and monitoring public access to firearms in order to minimize the public hazard they present.

This issue is handled very differently in various countries worldwide:

Links

Reference

  • Wikipedia
  • ConservapediaConservapedia is an unreliable source. "Studies show that increasing lawful access to guns results in less crime[1], but liberals push gun control because it increases the dependency of voters on government for protection."
  • dKosopedia "Effective gun control in some advanced industrial countries (Britain and Japan) has dramatically reduced the numbers of gun violence victims though it has not affected the violent crime rates of these or any other country."
  • SourceWatch
  • The Community Guide: Violence Prevention: Firearms Laws

Filed Links

Related

Video