6 proven policies for reducing crime and violence without gun control Vox



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By 
German Lopez @germanrlopez german.lopez@vox.com
Updated Jul 19, 2016, 10:40am EDT
6 proven policies for reducing crime and violence
without gun control
George Frey/Getty Images
On a night of the Republican convention focused on "making America safe
again," one question, strangely, went unanswered: How exactly could
policymakers make America safer? Although Americans are in fact
safer than
they were decades ago
, this seems like a pretty crucial question to answer
given the first day of the convention's theme.
I previously reached out to criminologists and researchers across the country
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about this issue. My question: What nonpartisan policies can America use to
reduce crime and gun violence without going after the guns themselves? I
started with the assumption that gun control laws would not happen, since that
issue is too politically fraught — and it's certainly not something Republicans
seem likely to support.
After all, although there's 
strong evidence
that America's uniquely high levels
of gun ownership cause the US to have more violence than other developed
countries, guns aren't the 
only
cause of violence and crime — there are other
factors, from cultural issues to socioeconomic variables to even smaller issues
like 
alcohol consumption
, that drive these problems.
What follows are six of the promising ideas I heard to reduce crime and gun
violence in particular. This is by no means a comprehensive list — there are
great websites
solely dedicated to that kind of catalog. But these policy ideas
give some perspective on how many options are left to local, state, and federal
lawmakers as long as they don't want to do anything about guns — or maybe
even if they do.
1) Stricter alcohol policies
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Alcohol has been linked to violence. According to the 
National Council on
Alcoholism and Drug Dependence
, alcohol is a factor in 40 percent of violent
crimes. And a 2010 
study
found a strong relationship between alcohol stores
and gun assaults. These statistics and research are one of the big reasons that
possessing a gun while drunk is 
largely illegal
.
"It's a disinhibition theory," Charles Branas, one of the 2010 study's authors,
said. "So it's not so much aggressiveness, but that decisions and judgment that
would normally be held in check are suddenly disinhibited under consumption
of alcohol."
This doesn't mean America should ban alcohol — prohibition in the 1920s was a
disaster. But there are other policies that America could take up to limit
alcohol-related problems:
A higher alcohol tax
: A 2010 
review of the research
in the 
American
Jasper Juinen/Getty Images
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Journal of Public Health
came out with strong findings: "Our results suggest
that doubling the alcohol tax would reduce alcohol-related mortality by an
average of 35%, traffic crash deaths by 11%, sexually transmitted disease by
6%, violence by 2%, and crime by 1.4%."
Reducing the number of alcohol outlets
: A 2009 
review
published in the
American Journal of Preventive Medicine
also found that limiting the number
of alcohol outlets — through, for example, stricter licensing — in an area can
limit problematic drinking and its dangers. But it also found that going too far
can have negative results — by, for example, causing more car crashes as
people take long drives to outlets and possibly drink before returning home.
Revoking alcohol offenders' right to drink
: South Dakota's 
24/7 Sobriety
program
effectively revokes people's right to drink if a court deems it
necessary after an alcohol-related offense. The program, specifically,
monitors offenders through twice-a-day breathalyzer tests or a bracelet
that can track blood alcohol level, and jails them for one or two days for each
failed test. 
Studies
from the RAND Corporation have linked the program to
drops in mortality, DUI arrests, and domestic violence arrests.
Notably, the NRA, the biggest gun rights group, already agrees alcohol and guns
don't mix. Its website 
says
, "Never use alcohol or over-the-counter,
prescription or other drugs before or while shooting." The question, Branas said,
is how to make that "operational" — and some of these policies could move in
that direction.
2) Hot-spot policing
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Yes, police practices have run into increasing criticism over the past couple
years — with the advent of the Black Lives Matter movement and its protests
against 
racial disparities
in the criminal justice system and police use of force.
But police can, obviously, play a huge role in reducing crime, especially by
adopting evidence-based tactics like hot-spot policing.
The idea, explained to me by famed criminologist David Kennedy: In many cities,
a very small subset of places, down to the street and block level, drive most of
the crime. So deploying police, intelligently, in these specific areas can have a
big impact on fighting crime and violence.

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