NCJ Number
79101
Journal
Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science Volume: 455 Dated: (May 1981) Pages: 80-91
Date Published
1981
Length
12 pages
Annotation
This article documents and assesses the increasingly important role of the States in gun control, with a focus on the nature and reliability of State systems for screening handgun buyers.
Abstract
Primary alternative approaches for controlling firearms are characterized, including efforts to deter violent crime and incapacitate violent criminals. The article focuses on one of these approaches, screening buyers through a gun permit or application-to-purchase system, whereby felons and other people judged too dangerous may be prevented from acquiring a gun. Almost half the States, which includes 64 percent of the population, require that buyers be screened by the police. These State systems operate within the Federal framework created by the Gun Control Act of 1968, which requires that most interstate transactions in firearms be handled by federally licensed dealers or manufacturers. The States' main problems are (1) weak Federal regulation of licensees, (2) incomplete State criminal history files, and (3) the difficulty of regulating hand-to-hand transactions in used handguns. States that wish to increase the effectiveness of their screening systems will probably have to assume responsibility for regulating retail dealers and will have to institute civil liability for dealers and individual gun owners, together with a more comprehensive registration system. A total of 23 footnotes are included. (Author abstract modified)