We found a match
Your institution may have access to this item. Find your institution then sign in to continue.
- Title
What Americans Think About Gun Control: Evidence from the General Social Survey, 1972–2016.
- Authors
Miller, Steven V.
- Abstract
Objective: Gun control is a classic case of policy gridlock and we commonly assume public opinion is at the foundation of this gridlock. However, public opinion analyses of attitudes about gun control often say little about the topic itself and do not fully leverage our long‐running survey data to assess partisan, regional, and temporal trends in attitudes toward gun control. Methods: I use over 26 waves of General Social Survey data from 1972 to 2016 to analyze the main public opinion cleavages (partisanship, urban/rural distinctions, and Census regions) of gun control. Results: I find that partisanship and ruralness are not robust predictors of attitudes about gun control and that partisan polarization is only partial and recent. Further assumptions about regional variation in attitudes toward gun control need reevaluation. Conclusion: Gun control policy gridlock says more about polarization at the elite level than at the mass level. Future research can also do well to assess issue‐linkage concerns on specific gun control policy measures.
- Subjects
GUN control in the United States; SOCIAL surveys; PUBLIC opinion; GOVERNMENT policy; ROBUST control
- Publication
Social Science Quarterly (Wiley-Blackwell), 2019, Vol 100, Issue 1, p272
- ISSN
0038-4941
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1111/ssqu.12555