Transmitting Desire: An Experiment on a Novel Measure of Gun Desirability in a Pandemic

IF 2.2 3区 社会学 Q2 SOCIOLOGY
Justin Sola
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

The COVID-19 pandemic and protests have marked an unprecedented increase in U.S. gun sales. But America has long been an outlier; the stockpile of private guns climbed to almost 300 million in 2017. Scholars use multiple theories to explain why gun sales have tripled since the early 2000s, and why disruptions like the pandemic might cause gun sales. However, scholars have difficulty evaluating these theories with existing retrospective estimates of gun sales and other measures, limiting their ability to test theory or suggest policy changes. This study uses the known increase in gun sales during the COVID-19 pandemic to introduce and experimentally validate a novel measure of gun desirability. With a sample of 4,240 U.S. residents, this project demonstrates that gun desirability is a valid measure of inclination toward gun ownership, and that a pandemic video vignette significantly increases overall gun desirability relative to a control video vignette. These results serve as a foundation for future scholarship to (1) discern gun desirability trends, (2) evaluate theorized causes of gun desirability, and (3) consider interventions on those conditions that arouse desire for gun ownership.
传递欲望:一种新的流行病中枪支可取性测量方法的实验
新冠肺炎疫情和抗议活动标志着美国枪支销售前所未有的增长。但美国长期以来一直是一个异类;2017年,私人枪支库存攀升至近3亿支。学者们使用多种理论来解释为什么自21世纪初以来枪支销量增长了两倍,以及为什么像大流行这样的混乱可能会导致枪支销售。然而,学者们很难用现有的对枪支销售和其他措施的回顾性估计来评估这些理论,这限制了他们检验理论或建议政策变化的能力。本研究利用COVID-19大流行期间已知的枪支销售增长,引入并实验验证了一种新的枪支可取性衡量标准。该项目以4,240名美国居民为样本,证明了对枪支的渴望是对枪支拥有倾向的有效衡量标准,并且相对于对照视频的小片段,流行病视频的小片段显著增加了对枪支的总体渴望。这些结果为未来的学术研究奠定了基础:(1)辨别枪支可取性趋势,(2)评估枪支可取性的理论原因,以及(3)考虑对那些引起枪支拥有欲望的条件进行干预。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.70
自引率
4.20%
发文量
38
期刊介绍: Established in 1957 and heralded as "always intriguing" by one critic, Sociological Perspectives is well edited and intensely peer-reviewed. Each issue of Sociological Perspectives offers 170 pages of pertinent and up-to-the-minute articles within the field of sociology. Articles typically address the ever-expanding body of knowledge about social processes and are related to economic, political, anthropological and historical issues.
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