Monday, September 14, 2015

John Lott: NEW REFEREED PUBLICATION IN EJW: EXPLAINING A BIAS IN RECENT STUDIES ON RIGHT-TO-CARRY LAWS

The paper can be downloaded here (http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2524729).

The more downloads of this paper, the higher the paper’s ranking and the more difficult it will be for critics to ignore it.

Not All Right-to-Carry Laws Are the Same, Yet Much of the Literature Keeps Ignoring the Differences

John R. Lott Jr. Crime Prevention Research Center

September 5, 2014

Econ Journal Watch, Vol 12(3), September 2015

Abstract: Unfortunately, many who have examined the impact of so-called "shall-issue" or "right-to-carry" laws assume that the adoption of such laws causes a large, immediate increase in the number of permits. But that is often not the case, for states differ widely as to how easily permits can be obtained. This problem is particularly problematic for studies that have looked at the period after 2000. In fact, the share of the adult population with permits increased less during the 1999-2010 period in the states that adopted right-to-carry laws than the states that they are being compared against.

More Here

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

They are comparing apples to oranges Arizona has a total population of about 5 million while new york city has a population of 11 million. True right to carry is no permit no registration and no hassle by cops for carrying.