Gun Control: A Documentary and Reference Guide
byRobert J. Spitzer is Distinguished Service Professor of Political Science at the State University of New York, College at Cortland.
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eBook
9780313345678
MLA
Spitzer, Robert. Gun Control: A Documentary and Reference Guide. Greenwood, 2009. ABC-CLIO, publisher.abc-clio.com/9780313345678.
Chicago Manual of Style
Spitzer, Robert. Gun Control: A Documentary and Reference Guide. Greenwood, 2009. http://publisher.abc-clio.com/9780313345678
APA
Spitzer, R. (2009). Gun Control: A Documentary and Reference Guide. Retrieved from http://publisher.abc-clio.com/9780313345678
- Description
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Gun control is one of the most enduringly controversial issues in modern American politics. For the first time this book compiles a comprehensive array of documents that explain and illuminate the historical and contemporary context of the modern gun debate. Bringing together over 50 documents from the colonial era to the present, including early colonial laws, founding documents, letters, political debates, federal and state laws, federal and state court cases, and various political documents, this book is an indispensable reference work for those seeking to understand the origins and modern consequences of American gun policy, including the Second Amendment's right to keep and bear arms. Accompanying commentary and analysis is included to help the reader fully understand the meaning of these documents. Numerous bibliographic sources provide additional resources for interested readers. Ideal for undergraduate and high school students, this collection of primary documents surrounding one of America's oldest controversial issues is a must-have for library shelves.
Contrary to popular impression, gun laws are as old as the country, and reflect the intersection of citizens' personal gun habits and the country's early need to defend itself by citizen militias who were required to arm themselves. The nation's gun policies evolved as its needs and resources changed. Old-style militias gave way to a modern professional American military, and the settling of the American frontier ushered in modern gun laws. In the past century, political assassinations and gun-related mass violence spurred both new gun control efforts and a burgeoning modern gun rights movement. Students will be able to read and analyze primary documents surrounding these events, including the Federalist Papers, early hunting laws, Supreme Court rulings, federal and state regulations, and recent political platform statements. Ideal for undergraduate and high school students, this collection of primary documents surrounding one of America's oldest controversial issues is a must-have for library shelves.
- Reviews/Endorsements
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". . . an excellent compilation of primary documents and other information on one of the most contentious and divisive topics that many first-year students research for entry-level English and speech classes. . . . The easily comprehensible format, the many bibliographic sources provided, and the list of gun control Web sites will enhance students' research. . . . This book, on a vital and interesting topic, would be an excellent addition to large public libraries and to high school and college libraries. . . . Highly recommended." - Choice"The topic of gun control has been covered in several publications: Glenn Utter's The Encyclopedia of Gun Control and Gun Rights (Oryx Pr., 2001) and Gregg Lee Carter's Guns in American Society: An Encyclopedia of History, Politics, Culture, and the Law (ABC-CLIO, 2002) are two fairly recent examples. Spitzer (political science, SUNY Cortland), who has published other works on the issue, including The Right To Bear Arms: Rights and Liberties Under The Law (ABC-CLIO, 2001) and The Politics of Gun Control (Chatham House, 1995), has compiled 54 documents arranged into eight broad categories. Each document is followed by an analysis of the significance and meaning of the document regarding gun control. The volume covers constitutional and other government documents, court decisions, acts passed by legislatures, as well as other writings such as the Federalist Papers. BOTTOM LINE There is very little overlap between this work and Greenwood's Gun Control Debate: A Documentary History (1997), edited by Marjolin Bijlefeld, which consists of speeches and editorials as opposed to the preponderance of legal documents in Spitzer's volume. The two volumes are more complementary than duplicative. The added analysis in Spitzer's work also separates it from the earlier effort. Ideal for undergraduates." - Library Journal"Spitzer (political science, State U. of New York-Cortland) has assembled documents that illustrate the history, evolution, scope and consequences of the issue of gun control. Original documents are important for anyone studying or taking part in the debate, he says, because so much information is distorted—deliberately or not—during emotional exchanges and pronouncements. He also explains the context and impact of each document. The primary arrangement is chronological, with sections on founding documents, the Second Amendment and early laws, early US and state court rulings, 20th-century US Supreme and lower-court rulings, modern gun laws, and the states and two major parties." - Reference & Research Book News"This useful compilation is recommended for public, secondary school, college, and university libraries." - Catholic Library World"With many suggestions for further research, this guide will be useful in high school, public and college libraries." - Lawrence Looks at Books
- Table of Contents
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Table of Contents
Gun Control: A Documentary and Reference Guide
Author(s): Spitzer, Robert;Contributors: Spitzer, Robert;Abstract:Gun control is one of the most enduringly controversial issues in modern American politics. For the first time this book compiles a comprehensive array of documents that explain and illuminate the historical and contemporary context of the modern gun debate. Bringing together over 50 documents from the colonial era to the present, including early colonial laws, founding documents, letters, political debates, federal and state laws, federal and state court cases, and various political documents, this book is an indispensable reference work for those seeking to understand the origins and modern consequences of American gun policy, including the Second Amendment's right to keep and bear arms. Accompanying commentary and analysis is included to help the reader fully understand the meaning of these documents. Numerous bibliographic sources provide additional resources for interested readers. Ideal for undergraduate and high school students, this collection of primary documents surrounding one of America's oldest controversial issues is a must-have for library shelves.
Contrary to popular impression, gun laws are as old as the country, and reflect the intersection of citizens' personal gun habits and the country's early need to defend itself by citizen militias who were required to arm themselves. The nation's gun policies evolved as its needs and resources changed. Old-style militias gave way to a modern professional American military, and the settling of the American frontier ushered in modern gun laws. In the past century, political assassinations and gun-related mass violence spurred both new gun control efforts and a burgeoning modern gun rights movement. Students will be able to read and analyze primary documents surrounding these events, including the Federalist Papers, early hunting laws, Supreme Court rulings, federal and state regulations, and recent political platform statements. Ideal for undergraduate and high school students, this collection of primary documents surrounding one of America's oldest controversial issues is a must-have for library shelves.
SortTitle: gun control: a documentary and reference guideAuthor Info:Robert J. SpitzerauthorRobert J. Spitzer is Distinguished Service Professor of Political Science at the State University of New York, College at Cortland.
eISBN-13: 9780313345678Cover Image URL: ~~FreeAttachments/9780313345678.jpgPrint ISBN-13: 9780313345661Entry Code: EGR4566Imprint: GreenwoodPages: 368Publication Date: 20090320Series: Documentary and Reference GuidesSubtitle: A Documentary and Reference Guide- Contents vii6
- Reader’s Guide to Related Documents and Sidebars xi10
- Foreword xv14
- Preface xix18
- Acknowledgments xxi20
- Introduction xxiii22
- 1. Founding Documents and Gun Rights 128
- The British Bill of Rights, 1689 229
- The Virginia Bill of Rights, 1776 431
- The Declaration of Independence, 1776 633
- Letter from General George Washington to the Continental Congress 936
- The U.S. Constitution of 1787 Pertaining to Militias 1239
- The Federalist Papers 1542
- Proposed Constitutional Amendments from State Ratifying Conventions 3259
- 2. The Bill of Rights, the Second Amendment, and Early Laws 3562
- Versions of the Second Amendment 3663
- Debate on Militias and the Right to Keep and Bear Arms, House of Representatives 3966
- Controlling Militias 4471
- The Federal Government Attempts to Get Militia-Eligible Men to Be Prepared for Militia Service 4875
- Early Gun Control Law from Pennsylvania Taking Guns from Those Who Refuse Military Service 5481
- Early Loyalty Oath-Based Gun Control Law from Pennsylvania 5683
- An Early Tennessee Law Barring the Carrying of Dangerous Weapons 5986
- An Early Georgia Law Banning Carrying of Deadly Weapons 6188
- An Early Virginia Law Banning Carrying of Deadly Weapons 6390
- Early Hunting by Firelight Law Sends Those Convicted into the Military 6693
- Another Early Hunting Regulation 6996
- 3. Early Supreme Court Rulings on Gun Laws and Rights 7198
- 4. Early State Court Rulings on Gun Regulations and Rights 95122
- An Early State Court Upholds Gun Rights 96123
- The Second Amendment Protects Citizen Service in Government Militias 100127
- Striking Down a Gun Law That Interfered with Government Militias 106133
- The Militia Basis of the Second Amendment Affirmed in State Court 111138
- States Viewed the Right to Bear Arms as Militia-Based 116143
- Privately Organized and Armed Bodies of Men Are Outside the Law 120147
- 5. Twentieth Century Supreme Court Cases 123150
- Guns and Non-Citizens 124151
- The Second Amendment, the Gangster Era, and Militias 127154
- The Modern National Guard Began as Colonial Militias 135162
- Two Justices Address the Politics of Gun Control 139166
- Federal Gun Law Held as Constitutional and a Reasonable Exercise of the Police Power 142169
- Expanded Federal Government Control over the National Guard is Constitutional 147174
- Congress May Not Require Local Police to Conduct Federal Background Checks for Gun Purchases 154181
- The Supreme Court Creates a New, Personal Right to Own Guns Under the Second Amendment 160187
- 6. Lower Federal Court Rulings on the Second Amendment 183210
- The Lower Federal Courts Interpret the Supreme Court’s View of the Second Amendment as Militia-Based 184211
- The Militia-Based View of the Second Amendment Applies to U.S. Territories under Federal Control 192219
- Citizens Must Be in Actual Militia Service for the Second Amendment to Apply 197224
- Handgun Ban Judged Constitutional 203230
- States May Enact Strict Laws Regarding the Carrying of Concealed Weapons 212239
- A Federal Court Declares, for the First Time, That the Second Amendment Protects an Individual Right 218245
- The Ninth Circuit Rebuts the Fifth Circuit 228255
- 7. Modern Gun Laws 237264
- The Old-Style Militias Become the National Guard 238265
- The Depression-Era Crime Wave Prompts New Gun Law 247274
- Gun Dealers Now Licensed, and Trafficking Regulated 253280
- Assassinations and Violence Spark New Gun Measures 258285
- Congress Enacts the First Significant Rollback of National Gun Laws 264291
- Congress Enacts Waiting Period and Background Checks for Handgun Purchases 268295
- Assault Weapons Banned for Ten Years 278305
- The Gun Lobby Wins Unique Legal Protection for the Gun Industry 286313
- 8. Gun Control, the States, and Politics 295322
- Gun Control Resources 323350
- Index 327354