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  • Book
    Marie Crandall, Stephanie Bonne, Jennifer Bronson, Woodie Kessel, editors.
    Summary: This edited collection of data and perspectives takes a fresh approach to gun violence prevention by addressing the question, "why are we losing the war on gun violence in America?" Although successes and failures in the prevention of gun violence are examined, it is a war we are losing, due to restrictions on research funding, entrenched historical perspectives, structural violence, and perhaps differing priorities or views on what is right or wrong. Gun violence is a public health crisis. It remains politicized and has been paralyzed with inaction. In the chapters, the authors write candidly about the challenges that have thwarted gun violence prevention, as well as highlight possible strategies for progress to save lives. Critical areas explored among the chapters include: Gun Violence, Structural Violence, and Social Justice School Shootings: Creating Safer Schools Mental Illness and Gun Violence Understanding the Political Divide in Gun Policy Support The Second Amendment and the War on Guns The Impact of Policy and Law Enforcement Strategies on Reducing Gun Violence in America Youth Gun Violence Prevention Organizing Smart Guns Don't Kill People With this compendium, the editors and authors hope to bridge the growing gap between groups or ideologies, and create common ground to discuss workable solutions. Why We Are Losing the War on Gun Violence in the United States is essential reading for a broad audience including practitioners, academics, researchers, students, policy-makers, and other professionals in public health, behavioral sciences (including social work and psychology), social sciences, health sciences, public policy, political science, and law, as well as any readers interested in the path to decreasing gun violence in America.

    Contents:
    1. Scope of firearm injuries in the United States
    2. Gun Violence, Structural Violence, and Social Justice
    3. Data on gun violence: what do we know and how do we know it?- 4. Unintentional firearm injuries in children
    5. School Shootings: Creating Safer Schools
    6. Intimate partner violence, gun violence, and human rights in the United States
    7. Mental illness and gun violence
    8. The need for safety and beliefs about guns
    9. Understanding the political divide in gun policy support
    10. The second amendment and the war on guns
    11. The history of gun law and the second amendment in the United States
    12. Public health approach to gun violence: "remove the gun handle"
    13. Combatting gun violence in Newark, New Jersey
    14. The impact of policy and law enforcement strategies on reducing gun violence in America
    15. Gun buyback programs in the United States
    16. Hospital-based violence prevention programs: From the ground up
    17. Looking at the Second Amendment from the Tenth: Early experiences with a state gun violence research center
    18. Youth Gun Violence Prevention Organizing
    19. Smart guns don't kill people
    20. Reducing the incidence and impact of gun violence through community engagement
    21. Gun violence and barriers to reparation in the United States: Scars of Survival.
    Digital Access Springer 2021
  • Article
    Pratt WB.
    J Invest Dermatol. 1978 Jul;71(1):24-35.
    Digital Access Access Options