I'm not sure this would scale to the United States, but at least they have real 
data, unlike most of the people pontificating...

http://www.slate.com/blogs/crime/2012/12/16/gun_control_after_connecticut_shooting_could_australia_s_laws_provide_a.html?utm_campaign=website&utm_source=sendgrid.com&utm_medium=email

After a 1996 Mass Shooting, Australia Enacted Strict Gun Laws. It Hasn't Had a 
Similar Massacre Since.

By Will Oremus

 | 

Posted Sunday, Dec. 16, 2012, at 10:00 PM ET


1473

 
Former Australian Prime Minister John Howard lays a wreath at the memorial site 
of the Port Arthur massacre on its 10th anniversary. The mass killing spurred 
Howard's government to pass sweeping gun control laws.
Photo by Ian Waldie/Getty Images

On April 28, 1996, a gunman opened fire on tourists in a seaside resort in Port 
Arthur, Tasmania. By the time he was finished, he had killed 35 people and 
wounded 23 more. It was the worst mass murder in Australia’s history.

Twelve days later, Australia’s government did something remarkable. Led by 
newly elected conservative Prime Minister John Howard, it announced a 
bipartisan deal with state and local governments to enact sweeping gun-control 
measures. A decade and a half hence, the results of these policy changes are 
clear: They worked really, really well.

At the heart of the push was a massive buyback of more than 600,000 
semi-automatic shotguns and rifles, or about one-fifth of all firearms in 
circulation in Australia. The country’s new gun laws prohibited private sales, 
required that all weapons be individually registered to their owners, and 
required that gun buyers present a “genuine reason” for needing each weapon at 
the time of the purchase. (Self-defense did not count.) In the wake of the 
tragedy, polls showed public support for these measures at upwards of 90 
percent.

What happened next has been the subject of several academic studies. Violent 
crime and gun-related deaths did not come to an end in Australia, of course. 
But as the Washington Post’s Wonkblog pointed out in August, homicides by 
firearm plunged 59 percent between 1995 and 2006, with no corresponding 
increase in non-firearm-related homicides. The drop in suicides by gun was even 
steeper: 65 percent. Studies found a close correlation between the sharp 
declines and the gun buybacks. Robberies involving a firearm also dropped 
significantly. Meanwhile, home invasions did not increase, contrary to fears 
that firearm ownership is needed to deter such crimes. But here’s the most 
stunning statistic. In the decade before the Port Arthur massacre, there had 
been 11 mass shootings in the country. There hasn’t been a single one in 
Australia since.

There have been some contrarian studies about the decrease in gun violence in 
Australia, including a 2006 paper that argued the decline in gun-related 
homicides after Port Arthur was simply a continuation of trends already under 
way. But that paper’s methodology has been discredited, which is not surprising 
when you consider that its authors were affiliated with pro-gun groups. Other 
reports from gun advocates have similarly cherry-picked anecdotal evidence or 
presented outright fabrications in attempting to make the case that Australia’s 
more-restrictive laws didn’t work. Those are effectively refuted by findings 
from peer-reviewed papers, which note that the rate of decrease in gun-related 
deaths more than doubled following the gun buyback, and that states with the 
highest buyback rates showed the steepest declines. A 2011 Harvard summary of 
the research concluded that, at the time the laws were passed in 1996, “it 
would have been difficult to imagine more compelling future evidence of a 
beneficial effect.”

Whether the same policies would work as well in the United States—or whether 
similar legislation would have any chance of being passed here in the first 
place—is an open question. Howard, the conservative leader behind the 
Australian reforms, wrote an op-ed in an Australian paper after visiting the 
United States in the wake of the Aurora shootings. He came away convinced that 
America needed to change its gun laws, but lamented its lack of will to do so.

There is more to this than merely the lobbying strength of the National Rifle 
Association and the proximity of the November presidential election. It is hard 
to believe that their reaction would have been any different if the murders in 
Aurora had taken place immediately after the election of either Obama or 
Romney. So deeply embedded is the gun culture of the US, that millions of 
law-abiding, Americans truly believe that it is safer to own a gun, based on 
the chilling logic that because there are so many guns in circulation, one's 
own weapon is needed for self-protection. To put it another way, the situation 
is so far gone there can be no turning back.
That’s certainly how things looked after the Aurora shooting. But after Sandy 
Hook, with the nation shocked and groping for answers once again, I wonder if 
Americans are still so sure that we have nothing to learn from Australia’s 
example.


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