Free shipping on all orders over $50
7-15 days international
21 people viewing this product right now!
30-day free returns
Secure checkout
30246530
"In this small book David Hemenway has produced a masterwork. He has dissected the various aspects of the gun violence epidemic in the United States into its component parts and considered them separately. He has produced a scientifically based analysis of the data and indeed the microdata of the over 30,000 deaths and 75,000 injuries which occur each year. Consideration and adoption of the policy lessons he recommends would strengthen the Constitutional protections that all of our citizens have to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness."-Richard F. Corlin, Past President, American Medical Association"This lucid and penetrating study is essential reading for anyone who wishes to understand the tragedy of gun violence in America and-even more important-what we can do to stop it. David Hemenway cuts through the cant and rhetoric in a way that no fair-minded person can dismiss, and no sane society can afford to ignore."-Richard North Patterson, novelist"The rate of gun-related homicide, suicide, and accidental injury has reached epidemic proportions in American society. Diagnosing and treating the gun violence epidemic demands the development of public health solutions in conjunction with legislative and law enforcement strategies."-Kweisi Mfume, President and CEO of NAACP"In scholarly, sober analytic assessments, including rigorous critiques of NRA-popularized pseudoscience, David Hemenway constructs a convincing case that firearm availability is a critical and proximal cause of unparalleled carnage. By formulating such violence as a public health issue, he proposes workable policies analogous to ones that reduced injuries from tobacco, alcohol, and automobiles."-Jerome P. Kassirer, Editor-in-Chief Emeritus, New England Journal of Medicine, and Distinguished Professor, Tufts University School of Medicine"As a former District Attorney and Attorney General, I know the urgency of providing safe homes, schools and neighborhoods for all. This remarkable tour-de-force is a powerful study of one promising solution: a data-rich, eminently readable demonstration of why we should treat gun violence as an American epidemic."-Scott Harshbarger, Former Attorney General of Massachusetts, President and CEO of Common Cause On an average day in the United States, guns are used to kill almost eighty people, and to wound nearly three hundred more. If any other consumer product had this sort of disastrous effect, the public outcry would be deafening; yet when it comes to guns such facts are accepted as a natural consequence of supposedly high American rates of violence.Private Guns, Public Health explodes that myth and many more, revealing the advantages of treating gun violence as a consumer safety and public health problem. David Hemenway fair-mindedly and authoritatively demonstrates how a public-health approach-which emphasizes prevention over punishment, and which has been so successful in reducing the rates of injury and death from infectious disease, car accidents, and tobacco consumption-can be applied to gun violence.Hemenway uncovers the complex connections between guns and self-defense, gun violence and schools, gun prevalence and homicide, and more. Finally, he outlines a policy course that would significantly reduce gun-related injury and death.With its bold new public-health approach to guns, Private Guns, Public Health marks a shift in our understanding of guns that will-finally-point us toward a solution.
On the subject of guns in America there is more heat than light. This is remarkable since guns affect so many American families. In this lucid and fascinating book David Hemenway explores the connections between guns and crime, of course.But Hemenway goes well beyond that. He says, for example, "A nation may be judged by how well it protects its children," and explains why we have off-the-charts rates of gun suicide and unintentional gun death. The answer is a lot more interesting than just that we have a lot of guns. Who has them? What types--handguns, rifles? How are they stored? Many people now own guns for protection. Well, are they likely to protect, or not? He summarizes the carefully done research on these topics and addresses many myths.Who makes and who sells guns? How are they regulated--or not? How about the unregulated market? How about guns not just in homes, but in schools, and in public?David Hemenway, Professor at the Harvard School of Public Health, begins his book with a quote, "[T]he history of public health might well be written as a record of successive re-defining of the unacceptable." (G. Vickers) Certainly the level of trauma American families suffer from gun homicide, suicide, domestic violence and other misuse of firearms, and from the many loopholes in our gun laws is unacceptable.Most people agree, but many are unsure what they should do because these problems seem so complex. Before we can help prevent gun violence without infringing on anyone's rights, we need to better understand the problem. Read this book. You will find it fascinating as well as enlightening.