RAND to help oversee high-quality research on gun violence

The Arnold Foundation also has committed to providing three years of support for the RAND Gun Policy in American initiative, which assessed the state of gun policy research in the United States and created tools to support the development of new gun policy research projects.

The LJAF initiative comes as the federal government has virtually abandoned research into gun violence. The Journal of the American Medical Association said last year that that from 2004 to 2015, federal research related to gun violence was “substantially underfunded and understudied” compared with other leading causes of death, based on the mortality rates of each.

The National Collaborative research agenda will include these areas of interest, among others:

· Characteristics of gun violence (How are guns purchased? How do changes in ownership occur? How are guns used? What are the differences in fatal and nonfatal gun use?)

· Gun violence interventions (Can we more effectively prevent violence-prone people from accessing guns? Which, if any, childhood education or prevention programs reduce gun violence in childhood and in later life? Do programs to physically improve high-crime areas work to decrease gun violence?)

· Risk and protective factors (What are the potential risks and benefits of having a gun in the house? What factors increase the probability of gun violence? What are the impacts of youth having access to, possessing and carrying guns?)

“The lack of data in this critical area is truly startling,” said Jeremy Travis, the Arnold Foundation’s executive vice president of criminal justice.

For instance, according to news reports, there are few recent national studies of who owns guns, how gun owners acquired their weapons, the theft of guns, the number of households with guns or the risk factors associated with gun violence.

“Unfortunately, government research has been stymied for more than two decades, and that gap hasn’t been adequately addressed by the private sector,” Travis said. “As with other public health challenges, the crisis of gun violence will be effectively addressed only if we produce high-quality, objective research. We believe that funding this research will save lives.”

The National Collaborative will form a Research Advisory Committee, likely made up of representatives from law enforcement, government, community, education, health, the private sector, and academia, to help shape the research agenda and choose rigorous, policy-relevant research.

Every day in the United States, close to 100 people are killed by guns, and for every death, two more are injured. According to independent reports, the gun-related murder rate in the U.S. is 25 times higher than the rate in 22 other high-income nations. About two-thirds of gun deaths in the United States are suicides.