研究:美枪杀率最高城市集中在枪支管控更松的“红州”,平均每10万人有11.1人被枪杀_OK阅读网
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研究:美枪杀率最高城市集中在枪支管控更松的“红州”,平均每10万人有11.1人被枪杀
America's highest gun death rates are in the South

来源:中国日报    2023-10-17 16:52



        The report argues that the findings refute Republican narratives that progressive policies stoke more crime in cities.
        In fact, there's a distinct gap between urban firearm homicide rates in blue states — which tend to have stronger gun safety laws — and those in red states, the report concludes.
        The analysis used data from the Gun Violence Archive on the 300 most populous U.S. cities.
        It comes amid a growing push to treat gun violence as a public health crisis, including New Mexico's controversial use of a public health order to ban open and concealed carry.
        The analysis shows "we're really seeing two different Americas when it comes to gun violence," said Chandler Hall, the report's author and a senior policy analyst at CAP.
        "There's already a lot that cities are trying to do to address gun violence locally … but when they're hamstrung by state policies and can't control the flow of guns or how guns are carried in their cities, there's only so much city officials can do," he added.
        What's more, some blue-state cities, like Chicago, are bordered by red states with looser gun laws.
        St. Louis had America's highest gun homicide rate in 2022, followed by Birmingham, Ala., New Orleans, Jackson, Miss., and Baltimore.
        By the numbers: The average gun homicide rate in blue-state cities was 7.2 per 100,000 residents from 2015 to 2022, the analysis found. In red-state cities, it was 11.1 deaths per 100,000.
        Cities also typically don't have much control over gun laws, experts say.
        "A lot of cities are bound by state-level policies," said Dan Semenza, an assistant professor at Rutgers and a member of the Regional Gun Violence Research Consortium at the Rockefeller Institute of Government. "There's often little wiggle room for cities to be able to go far and beyond the policies that states have on the books because the cities are required to abide by those laws and policies."
        "At the end of the day, it's just about guns and opportunities and that risk, and it goes up when more guns are available," he said. "It's not about individual intent. It's about population-level risk."
        
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