The new edition of this classic text covers the latest developments in American gun policy including the most recent shooting incidents that persist in plaguing the American landscape. Continuing a multi-decade trend, crime generally remains low throughout the US, but mass shootings have increased in both number and lethality, stoking greater support for gun laws among the public. Two seismic political events are highlighted in the eighth edition. The first is the ascendance of the gun safety movement, culminating in numerous electoral victories for gun law supporters in 2018 congressional and state races around the country. This outcome, which contributed to the Democrats’ capture of the House of Representatives for the first time since 2008, also demonstrates that support for stronger gun laws could be a winning issue for proponents in 2020 and beyond. The second political development featured is the financial, political, and legal crises that beset the nation’s oldest and most powerful gun group, the National Rifle Association. These crises are sufficiently grave that they may pose an existential threat to the organization’s traditional dominance in the realm of gun politics. Author Robert J. Spitzer has long been a recognized authority on gun control and gun policy. His even-handed treatment of the issue--as both a member of the NRA and the Brady Center--continues to compel national and international interest, including appearances on major media such as the PBS NewsHour . The eighth edition of The Politics of Gun Control provides the reader with up-to-date data and coverage of gun ownership, gun deaths, school shootings, border patrols and new topics including universal background checks, limits on large capacity ammunition magazines, and "red flag" laws. New to the Eighth Edition
Robert J. Spitzer is Distinguished Service Professor of Political Science at the State University of New York, College at Cortland, where he has taught for nearly forty years. He has also been a visiting professor at Cornell University for almost thirty years. Spitzer is Series Editor for the book series "American Constitutionalism" for SUNY Press, and for the "Presidential Briefing Book" Series for Routledge. He's received the SUNY Chancellor's Award for Excellence in Scholarship, and served as President of the Presidency Research Group, an international association of presidency scholars (affiliated with the American Political Science Association). He has testified before Congress on several occasions, and is often quoted and interviewed by American and international news outlets, and contributes regularly to newspapers and other media outlets. He earned his Ph.D. from Cornell University.
I learned a great deal from this book. Admittedly, though, it does have a slant; I've yet to find a single book on the issues that is not far slanted. Of course, this one leans on the side I lean toward, but it also leans too far for me in some respects, as I've read a lot on the other side too. But in my opinion, it never goes as far astray in rhetoric or stretching of numbers as Lott's books tend to on the other side.
And even my students who feel strongly against gun legislation learned a lot from the information here. If only everyone would open up to *listen* to what others had to say......
A lot of useful information and some interesting discussions but not as much as I had hoped for. His last chapter in which he outlines a new framework for gun control politics is particularly disappointing.
For someone who lived in Portugal most of her life, gun control was something unimaginable to me. This book gave me some context to why the issue is more prominent in American culture.
This books seems to come closer than most I have read, but the author seems to have missed that our founding father's owned quite a lot of firearms and Jefferson, at multiple times, mentioned that revolutionary war soldiers (who fought with privately owned guns) were crack shots because they had used guns since they were children.
Jefferson personally purchased 12 pounds of black powder in 1777 for his guns. Founders also mentioned fowling seasons in letters, which shows they obviously did hunt. There wasn't gun worship then, as there is now, but it was obviously a readily available tool since they had enough to win their first war with their own firearms- and that was after the British confiscation of firearms in 1775.
The author also claimed the second amendment was not meant to be utilized as a weapon for self defense, but as a hunting implement. Let's say for the sake of argument that is true. Then the argument may be made that gun owner rights are still being violated, as there is a LARGE anti-hunting movement seeking to ban hunting. He curiously makes no mention of that.
As it so happened, I had just read "The Gun and Its Development" by W.W. Greener (a British rifle manufacturer) written in 1910. Greener's exhaustive history of the firearm directly contradicts many of Spitzer's claims about early firearms, which is interesting as Greener was British and therefore not part of the American firearm debate, whose book was written well before the current firearm debate, and was further developed in firearms than the U.S.. at that point in history.
I read the 1995 first edition, which is obviously out of date. Still, it is revealing and disturbing to see how little has changed in the past two decades. Mr. Spitzer explains how the Second Amendment came to be (it's all about the militia), and how the NRA evolved from a sportsman's organization into a political action group. He also details the actions taken and not taken by Congress up to the Clinton administration.
I read the 1995 edition. This is a relatively well written, relatively well researched policy discussion - incorrect usage of terms like bullets and clips instead of rounds and magazines notwithstanding (semantics matter in policy discussion). It is biased, though that's not altogether surprising. Given the date for the edition I read, it's also lacking more recent topics of discussion, but without a time machine what can one do?
I read this for a public policy class and while I think it was a good case study to look at, I just did not enjoy this book. Part of that was because of the stories at the beginning. Those were not it for me. I also was not enjoying the prose throughout the book and didn't feel like I was learning a mass amount in the first half of the book.
Very good book introducing this chaotic debate to readers. It also demonstrates how public policy and law interact with politics, history and morality.
This 1995 book is obviously, at this point, outdated. The District of Columbia v. Heller and McDonald v. Chicago changed a lot when it comes to federal gun laws, and post-9/11 hysteria has had a large impact on our national gun culture. That being said, Spitzer provides a context and history for gun legislation in the U.S. and does so without the vitriol that is in many accounts on the subject. I highly recommend this book for anyone interested in the topic with the caveat that it should be looked at alongside events that have happened in the last 20 years.
Solid history of gun ownership/control in the U.S. Quite fascinating, as well as frustrating. I would recommend it to anyone looking for information on this subject.