Frontier Violence and Law and Order: Historical and Geographical Variance in the Great Plains of the North American West

IF 0.3 Q3 AREA STUDIES
Pierre M. Atlas
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

Stark differences between the United States and Canada in the post-Civil War/ post-Confederation frontier West of the Great Plains and Prairies regarding the role of government, levels of interpersonal violence, and access to firearms (especially handguns) helped to shape the two countries’ divergent developmental paths. Utilizing the alternative approaches of Seymour Martin Lipset’s “origins thesis” and borderlands studies to structure its analysis, this article contrasts the frontier experiences of both countries in the nineteenth century concerning gun laws, violence, and the enforcement of law and order. Canada’s frontier West was demonstrably more orderly and peaceful than was the American frontier, yet the closer one came to the 49th parallel, the more rowdy and violence-prone were the Canadian towns and settlements. Nevertheless, despite occasional instances of lawlessness, even the Alberta borderlands were not as violent or unruly as the American frontier, due in large measure to a strong central government and the effectiveness of the North-West Mounted Police.
边境暴力与法律与秩序:北美西部大平原的历史和地理差异
美国和加拿大在内战后/邦联后大平原和大草原以西的边境地区,在政府角色、人际暴力程度和枪支(尤其是手枪)获取方面存在明显差异,这有助于形成两国不同的发展道路。本文利用西摩·马丁·利普塞特的“起源论”和边境地区研究的替代方法来构建其分析,对比了19世纪两国在枪支法、暴力以及执法和秩序方面的边境经验。加拿大西部边境显然比美国边境更有序、更和平,但越靠近49线,加拿大的城镇和定居点就越吵闹、越容易发生暴力。然而,尽管偶尔会出现无法无天的情况,但即使是阿尔伯塔省边境地区也不像美国边境那样暴力或不守规矩,这在很大程度上要归功于强大的中央政府和西北骑警的有效性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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