Warner Tara D, Steidley Trent
Department of Criminal Justice, University of Alabama at Birmingham, 210 UBOB, 1201 University Boulevard, Birmingham, AL, USA.
Center for Family and Demographic Research, Bowling Green State University, Bowling Green, OH, USA.
J Crime Justice. 2022;45(4):484-505. doi: 10.1080/0735648x.2021.1997787. Epub 2021 Nov 6.
Given notable recent spikes in gun purchases in the U.S., we revisit the 'fear and loathing' hypothesis of firearm demand by (1) establishing how crime/victimization fears are shaped by broader economic, cultural, and racial status anxieties (those emerging from group status threats [loathing]) and (2) illustrating how fear and loathing matter for protective gun ownership and gun carry (among owners), and openness to future protective ownership among non-owners. Using data from a nationwide survey of adults in the U.S. (n = 2,262) collected in 2019, we find that fears of crime and victimization are often more strongly associated with status anxieties than with safety threats. Both status anxieties and victimization are associated with protective ownership and carry. Among non-owners, those higher in cultural anxiety are especially likely to be open toward future protective gun ownership. This study illustrates the multidimensional fear-guns link, wherein both status-related threats and victimization-related fears shape why individuals guns, and how they guns.
鉴于近期美国枪支购买量显著激增,我们重新审视枪支需求的“恐惧与厌恶”假说,方法是:(1)确定犯罪/受害恐惧如何受到更广泛的经济、文化和种族地位焦虑(那些源于群体地位威胁[厌恶]的焦虑)的影响;(2)说明恐惧和厌恶如何影响保护性枪支拥有和携带(在枪支拥有者中),以及非枪支拥有者对未来保护性枪支拥有的接受程度。利用2019年对美国成年人进行的全国性调查(n = 2262)的数据,我们发现,对犯罪和受害的恐惧往往与地位焦虑的关联比与安全威胁的关联更强。地位焦虑和受害经历都与保护性枪支拥有和携带有关。在非枪支拥有者中,文化焦虑程度较高的人尤其可能接受未来的保护性枪支拥有。本研究阐明了恐惧与枪支之间的多维度联系,即与地位相关的威胁和与受害相关的恐惧都塑造了个人为何拥有枪支,以及他们如何使用枪支。