View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk
brought to you by
CORE
provided by College of the Holy Cross: CrossWorks
College of the Holy Cross
CrossWorks
Honors Theses
Honors Projects
5-4-2020
A Comparative Analysis of the Politics of Gun Control in the
United States and Australia
Nicholas Leone
Follow this and additional works at: https://crossworks.holycross.edu/honors
Part of the American Politics Commons, Australian Studies Commons, Comparative Politics
Commons, Legislation Commons, Second Amendment Commons, and the United States History
Commons
A Comparative Analysis of the Politics of Gun Control Legislation in
the United States and Australia
Nick Leone
May 4, 2020
Leone
2
Abstract
This thesis centers on the interrelationships and differences in firearm legislation
and culture within the United States of America and Australia. As a result of the Port
Arthur Massacre on April 28, 1996, Australia was faced with an unprecedented mass
shooting that completely shifted Australian politics and culture regarding firearm safety
and availability. Thus, the thesis inquiries into the effectiveness of Australia’s buyback
program as well as the cultural and political factors that allowed for such legislation to be
passed. After suffering 118 mass shootings in the U.S. since 1982, the history of the
United States regarding gun control is one of inaction. Overall, that is why the core of my
thesis is rooted in the culture of each nation regarding firearms; it determines what about
Australia created an environment amicable to gun control that seems impossible in the
U.S. The answer to this question rests in many factors: the history of each nation, the role
of lobby groups (such as the NRA), the structure of government, public opinion, and the
rights of citizens (the Second Amendment). Balancing all of these factors, this thesis
acknowledges that the U.S. could not have as drastic a policy response as that of
Australia, but the U.S. can easily implement effective firearm safety measures that cuts
through the partisanship divide of gun rights activists and pro-gun control lobbyists.
Leone
3
Table of Contents
Introduction – Why Guns? .......................................................................................... 4
Chapter I: Stick ‘Em Up! The History of Gun Violence in the United States .................... 7
A.
History of the Second Amendment in the U.S. ............................................................7
B.
1994 Assault Weapon Ban and its Implications on U.S. Gun Legislation and Violence . 15
C.
The Current State of Gun Violence and Policy in the U.S. ........................................... 22
Chapter II: Down Under! The History of Australian Gun Violence ............................... 29
A.
History of Gun Legislation and Violence in Australia before Port Arthur..................... 29
B.
Port Arthur Massacre and its Implications on Gun Legislation and Violence ............... 43
C.
The Current State of Gun Legislation and Violence in Australia .................................. 50
Chapter III: The Culture Question .............................................................................. 58
A.
Analysis of Australia’s Structure of Government ....................................................... 59
B.
History of Australia’s Colonization ............................................................................ 62
C.
What is Australian (firearm) nationalism? ................................................................. 65
D.
America’s Colonial Legacy of Firearm Culture ............................................................ 71
E.
The Unstoppable NRA .............................................................................................. 73
Chapter IV: Where does one go from here? ............................................................... 77
Bibliography............................................................................................................. 87
Leone
4
Introduction – Why Guns?
Ranging from pro-gun lobby groups, to media outlets, and even to one’s estranged
uncle, the common argument of “guns don’t kill people; people do,”1 is constantly
thrown around in American culture. While many Americans do not view their gun laws
as unusual compared to those of other countries, the rest of the world recognizes the
distinctiveness of the fervor that U.S. gun culture radiates.2 Since 1789, twenty-four
constitutions from nine different nations have contained some sort of mention to gun
rights, and since World War II no country has written a constitution that includes such a
right.3 Currently, the United States, Guatemala, and Mexico are the only remaining
countries that guarantee the right to bear arms, yet the U.S. Constitution is the only
constitution that omits any written conditions under which the government can regulate
arms and munitions.4
As a result, the crux of this thesis revolves around the question of culture and whether
it drives law and policy or vice versa. Australia was chosen for this comparative analysis
with the United States, for in 1996 Australia suffered a devastating mass shooting
committed by a lone gunman with enormous legal firepower. Unlike the United States
which has been faced with 118 mass shootings since 1982 with no substantive additions
to nation-wide gun control legislation,5 Australia treated its one respective mass shooting
David Kyle Johnson, “Guns Don’t Kill People, People Do? What exactly is wrong with the argument,”
Psychology Today, February 12, 2013, https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog.
2
Larry Donnelly, “America’s gun culture: What makes Americans so attached to their weapons?”
TheJournal.ie, March 4, 2018, https://www.thejournal.ie/readme/americas-gun-culture-3877087-Mar2018/.
3
Zachary Elkins, Tom Ginsburg and James Melton, “U.S. Gun Rights Truly Are American
Exceptionalism,” Bloomberg Opinion, March 7, 2013, https://www.bloomberg.com/opinion/articles/201303-07.
4
Id.
5
For this thesis, mass shootings are defined in line with the FBI’s definition. Up until 2013, this entailed a
single attack in a public place with 4 victim deaths. Since 2013, the baseline has been lowered to 3 victim
deaths. See Mark Follman, Gavin Aronsen and Deanna Pan, “US Mass Shootings, 1982-2019: Data From
1
Leone
5
as the breaking point that ushered in changes to their nation’s gun laws.6 As Australian
journalist A. Odysseus Patrick expresses, “We Australians have a profoundly different
relationship with weapons. Americans love guns. We’re scared of them.”7 Therefore, this
thesis is interested in how one “western” democracy, Australia, could accomplish such a
degree of gun control while a similar western democracy, the United States, is incapable
of doing so. It integrates the history of gun legislation and mass shootings in the United
States and Australia alongside culture, history, public opinion, and possible future policy
outcomes for the United States to understand the causal factors leading to different gun
policies in Australia and the U.S.
The thesis’ first chapter examines the respective history of gun legislation,
violence, and culture in the United States of America. Afterwards, the second chapter
takes the exact same course as the first but applies it to Australia. In laying out the
framework of gun policy and politics juxtaposed with culture, the thesis attempts to
scrutinize how the Australian Government managed to act swiftly on the matter whereas
the issue of gun control in the U.S. is violently partisan. Then, chapter three analyzes
culture and its impact on gun legislation across the two countries. It lays out the structure
of the Australian and U.S. governments before scrutinizing the effect of colonization and
nationalism. Lastly, chapter four looks at the possible policies the United States could
adopt to fix its current nationwide problem of firearm violence. After acknowledging that
the U.S. cannot follow in the footsteps of Australia’s policy and should not simply
Mother Jones’ Investigation,” Mother Jones, Updated: February 26, 2020,
https://www.motherjones.com/politics/2012/12/mass-shootings-mother-jones-full-data/.
6
Matthew Grimson, “Port Arthur Massacre: The Shooting Spree That Changed Australia’s Gun Laws,”
NBC News, July 25, 2015, https://www.nbcnews.com/news/world/port-arthur-massacre-shooting-spreechanged-australia-gun-laws-n396476.
7
A. Odysseus Patrick, “Australia’s Gun Laws Are Not a Model for America,” The New York Times,
February 22, 2018, https://www.nytimes.com/2018/02/23/opinion/australias-gun-laws-america.html.
Leone
6
continue to do nothing about the issue, the thesis concludes with a list of possible policy
ideas that would preserve gun owners’ rights while also further safeguarding the security
of all people.
In sum, the overarching thesis question is, “What made Australia’s gun culture so
much more favorable to gun control than the gun culture of the United States? From this
initial question, numerous sub-questions arise. First, did the Port Arthur Massacre in
April 1996 and Prime Minister John Howard’s response reshape Australia’s culture of
mass shootings and attitudes towards firearms, or did it merely act as a band-aid solution
in a time of homogeneity that failed to counter violence? As a result, with the stark
increase of mass shootings in the United States of America in the 21st century, would a
U.S. response like Australia’s be feasible, rational, and supported? Or, would America’s
strong gun culture and polarization, fueled by gun lobbies such as the National Rifle
Association, and the presence of the 2nd Amendment with its recent judicial
interpretation, prevent major changes to U.S. law?
Leone
7
Chapter I: Stick ‘Em Up! The History of Gun Violence in the United
States
A. History of the Second Amendment in the U.S.
The Second Amendment serves as the foundation for an American culture rooted
in the proliferation of firearms. Before 2008, the Second Amendment was historically
perceived by the majority of judges, academics, and lawyers to entail a right to bear arms
that could be regulated by the state governments.8 However, because of the nature and
power of judicial interpretation, the Supreme Court was capable of reinterpreting the
Second Amendment to give power to the citizens of the U.S. to be able to obtain and hold
guns as individuals.9 In 2008, the Supreme Court’s ruling in District of Columbia v
Heller massively shifted the narrative of what the Second Amendment means.
Under District of Columbia law, it was a crime to carry an unregistered firearm,
and the registration of handguns was forbidden thereby making handgun possession
illegal.10 A D.C. special policeman, Dick Heller, attempted to register a handgun he
wished to keep at home, but the District refused.11 After filing a suit on Second
Amendment grounds, the case made it to the Supreme Court where it ruled in a 5-4 vote
that the Second Amendment protects the right to bear arms for “the core lawful purpose
of self-defense.”12 In addition, the majority opinion of the Court written by Justice Scalia
struck down opposing arguments emphasizing the requirement for firearm possession to
8
Joseph E. Sitzmann, "High-Value, Low-Value, and No-Value Guns: Applying Free Speech Law to the
Second Amendment," The University of Chicago Law Review 86, no. 7 (November 2019): 1986-87,
www.jstor.org/stable/26792622.
9
Pooja Toor, “United States vs. Everybody, a comparative analysis of gun laws in America and various
countries around the world,” Journal of Law and International Affairs at Penn State Law, April 3, 2018,
https://sites.psu.edu/jlia/author/pxt41/#_edn4.
10
554 U.S. 570 (2008).
11
Id.
12
Id.
Leone
8
be linked with service in a “well-regulated militia.” The Supreme Court held, “The
Second Amendment protects an individual right to possess a firearm unconnected with
service in a militia, and to use that arm for traditionally lawful purposes, such as selfdefense within the home;”13 thus, the Court broke the Second Amendment up into its
prefatory and operative clauses underlying the prefatory clause’s inability to limit or
expand the scope of the operative clause.14 Although District of Columbia v Heller
shifted the Supreme Court’s interpretation of the Second Amendment, it failed to provide
an all-encompassing view of what the Second Amendment entails for U.S. citizens.
Within the opinion of the Court, the Court claims, “One should not expect it [D.C. v
Heller] to clarify the entire field.”15 This inability of the Supreme Court to wholesomely
define its stance on the Second Amendment has caused federal courts to struggle in
analyzing Second Amendment cases, yet the Supreme Court has not intervened to
provide any clarity on the confusion.16
Nevertheless, two years after District of Columbia v Heller, the Supreme Court
once again upheld handgun ownership on Second Amendment grounds in the case
McDonald v Chicago (2010).17 Following the ruling in Heller, petitioners filed a federal
suit against the City of Chicago for its laws which effectively banned handgun possession
by almost all private citizens.18 The petitioners held that Chicago’s handgun ban had left
them vulnerable to criminals and was a violation of the Second and Fourteenth
Amendments, but the federal court refuted this charge asserting that Heller had not
13
Id.
Id.
15
Id at 630.
16
Sitzmann, “Applying Free Speech Law,” 1983.
17
561 U.S. 742 (2010).
18
Id.
14
Leone
9
commented on whether the Second Amendment applied to the States.19 After reaching
the Supreme Court, Justice Alito delivered the opinion of the Court reaffirming the ruling
in Heller that “the Second Amendment protects the right to keep and bear arms for the
purpose of self-defense,” and the Court added that since the Court had “previously held
that most of the provisions of the Bill of Rights apply with full force to both the Federal
Government and the States… we hold that the Second Amendment right is fully
applicable to the States.”20 Hence, to justify the Second Amendment’s authority over
state governments, McDonald v Chicago intertwined the Fourteenth Amendment’s Due
Process clause alongside the Second Amendment’s right to bear arms.21 Inevitably, on the
grounds that the Court has guaranteed protections to most of the provisions of the Bill of
Rights under the Due Process Clause, the opinion of the Court enforced the Second
Amendment against the States under the same standards to protect these personal rights
against federal encroachment.22 With regard to protecting a citizen’s individual liberties
that come with the Second Amendment, the Supreme Court made the right ruling in these
cases.
Now, in criticizing the Supreme Court’s recent rulings on the Second Amendment
in comparison to the Court’s precedent prior to District of Columbia v Heller, this thesis
raises the views of early Americans before juxtaposing their stances with the dissenting
opinions of District of Columbia v Heller. Since Heller stands as a powerful example of
the way that American gun culture has reshaped gun jurisprudence, the rulings of Presser
19
Id.
Id at 749-50.
21
The Fourteenth Amendment states: “No State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the
privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any State deprive any person of life,
liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal
protection of laws.” U.S. Const. Amend. XIV.
22
561 U.S. 764-5 (2010).
20
Leone
10
v Illinois (1886), U.S. v Miller (1939), and Lewis v U.S. (1980) are raised to express the
shift in Supreme Court precedent regarding the Second Amendment.
William Rawle was an American lawyer who served as U.S. District Attorney for
Pennsylvania in the 1790s after being appointed by George Washington.23 Within
William Rawle’s view of the U.S. Constitution in 1829, he portrayed, “No clause in the
Constitution could by any rule of construction be conceived to give to congress a power
to disarm the people. Such a flagitious attempt could only be made under some general
pretence by a state legislature.”24 As a result, while Rawle stresses the federal
government’s inability to disarm the people, he illustrates the necessity of states to adopt
regulations that prevent both a disorderly militia and an assemblage of persons with arms
for an unlawful purpose in order to “make good soldiers with the least interruptions of the
ordinary and useful occupations of civil life.”25
Rawle’s position mirrors that of Justice Stevens in D.C. v Heller, for William
Rawle places the Second Amendment as a restraint on the federal government, not
necessarily on the state governments, to disarm the people “in any blind pursuit of
inordinate power.”26 In a similar manner, Justice Stevens starts by highlighting the
Founders’ intention for the Second Amendment to ensure the people of each state could
maintain a well-regulated militia due to concerns raised during the ratification of the
Constitution that Congress may attempt to disarm state militias to create a national
“William Rawle,” University of Pennsylvania, https://archives.upenn.edu/exhibits/pennpeople/biography/william-rawle.
24
William Rawle, A View of the Constitution of the United States of America (Philadelphia 1829) in “The
Founders’ Constitution: Vol. 5, Amend. II, Doc. 9” http://presspubs.uchicago.edu/founders/documents/amendIIs9.html.
25
Id.
26
Id.
23
Leone
11
standing army that would threaten the sovereignty of the several States.27 Therefore, the
Second Amendment text and the arguments made by its proponents had no intention to
limit the state legislature’s authority to regulate private civilian uses of firearms or to
enshrine a doctrine of self-defense in the Constitution.28 In light of Justice Steven’s
dissent, it is clear that the District of Columbia’s prohibition of handgun ownership is not
a blind pursuit of inordinate power, but rather it is an attempt to combat the egregious
nature of handgun violence in the City which is committed by an assemblage of persons
with arms for an unlawful purpose.29
In fact, Justice Breyer’s dissent in District of Columbia v Heller makes mention of
colonial state governments’ actions to regulate firearm use. Boston, Philadelphia, and
New York City all restricted the firing of guns within city limits to some degree.30 Along
with these three cities, several other towns and cities not only regulated the storage of
gunpowder but also prohibited the carrying of loaded firearms anywhere in the city,
unless the carrier did not plan on entering a building with a loaded firearm.31 Altogether,
through the inclusion of this historical evidence, Justice Breyer demonstrates that “a selfdefense assumption is the beginning, rather than the end, of any constitutional inquiry.”32
While retaining the self-defense right serves to protect the Second Amendment, it fails to
acknowledge the law’s rationale and the problems it is responding to; by banning
handguns completely, law enforcement officers can immediately assume that any
27
554 U.S. 637 (2008).
Id.
29
554 U.S. 637 (2008).
30
Id at 683.
31
Id at 684-5.
32
Id at 687.
28
Leone
12
handgun in someone’s possession is illegal thus significantly reducing the number of
handguns in D.C. and alleviating the recorded problem of handgun violence in D.C.33
In Presser v Illinois (1886), Herman Presser attempted to file a case against the
state of Illinois for indicting him on charges that he violated the Military Code of Illinois
by marching with an armed body of men without a license.34 Here, the Supreme Court
ruled that the Second Amendment is “a limitation only on the power of Congress and the
national government, and not of the States.”35 Moreover, the Court also ruled that the
Fourteenth Amendment does not “prevent a State from passing such laws to regulate the
privileges and immunities of its own citizens as do not abridge their privileges and
immunities as citizens of the United States.”36 This ruling clearly runs counter to the
current rhetoric of the Supreme Court in both Heller and McDonald, yet a modern selfdefense narrative has trumped previous judicial precedent to strip states of their right to
maintain overarching firearm regulations.
Next, in deciding the extent to which the federal government may regulate the
ownership of firearms by citizens, U.S. v Miller (1939) upheld the indictment of Jack
Miller and Frank Layton for knowingly and willfully transporting an unregistered sawedoff shotgun less than eighteen inches in length.37 Under the National Firearms Act of
1934, the Act imposed a tax on the making and transfer of certain firearms and required
U.S. citizens to register all NFA firearms with the Secretary of Treasury; these certain
firearms included shotguns and rifles with barrels less than eighteen inches in length and
33
Id at 687, 711.
116 U.S. 252 (1886).
35
Id.
36
Id.
37
307 U.S. 174 (1939).
34
Leone
13
certain other weapons such as machineguns, firearm mufflers, and silencers.38 In citing
the National Firearms Act, U.S. v Miller affirmed that it was neither an invasion of the
reserved powers of the States for the federal government to regulate certain firearms nor
did it violate the Second Amendment, for the firearms in question had no “reasonable
relation to the preservation or efficiency of a well-regulated militia.”39 Overall, this
power for government to regulate criminal firearm behavior carries over to the majority
opinions in Heller and McDonald. Justice Scalia expresses:
“Like most rights, the Second Amendment right is not unlimited… The Court’s opinion should not
be taken to cast doubt on long standing prohibitions on the possession of firearms by felons and
the mentally ill, or laws forbidding the carrying of firearms in sensitive places such as schools and
government buildings, or laws imposing conditions and qualifications on the commercial sale of
arms. Miller’s holding that the sorts of weapons protected are those “in common use at the time”
finds support in the historical tradition of prohibiting the carrying of dangerous and unusual
weapons.”40
Hence, the majority opinion acknowledges government’s power to regulate
firearms in certain circumstances without infringing on individual rights.
Within Lewis v U.S. (1980), George Calvin Lewis Jr. filed a suit against the U.S.
for preventing him from owning a firearm due to a previous felony conviction.41
Ultimately, the Court upheld the previous rulings on the case attesting that the Gun
Control Act of 1968, which prohibited felons from owning firearms, was constitutional.42
In applying a “rational basis” standard, the Court defended the necessity for felons to first
receive pardon for their felony status before obtaining a firearm.43 Consequently, this
prevention of felons to acquire a gun fulfills “Congress’ purpose to keep firearms away
Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives, “National Firearms Act,” ATF, 1934.
307 U.S. 174 (1939).
40
554 U.S. 571 (2008).
41
445 U.S. 55 (1980).
42
Id.
43
Id.
38
39
Leone
14
from persons classified as potentially irresponsible and dangerous” thus emphasizing the
government’s ability to restrict the rights of individuals who violate U.S. law.44
Within cases before Heller, the Supreme Court managed to visibly draw lines
where firearm regulations were constitutional or unconstitutional. Because the Bill of
Rights only applied to the federal government during these initial cases, the Court upheld
firearm regulations on the basis that the Second Amendment did not apply to the states.
Since the Bill of Rights has now been applied to the states following the Fourteenth
Amendment, Heller and McDonald have created a new precedent where a Second
Amendment right to self-defense in conjunction with firearm ownership cannot be
infringed upon at the state or federal level.
In sum, the history of the Second Amendment in the United States’ judicial
system and culture demonstrates the discrepancies of the present-day rulings of the
Supreme Court that stress self-defense and deregulation of firearms at a state and federal
level compared to the history of Supreme Court precedent that acknowledged the abilities
of the state and federal governments to regulate and limit Second Amendment rights for
the safety and security of the nation. Overall, when politically charged in the modern era,
the “right to keep and bear arms” has struck a chord with people of very different
backgrounds, experiences, and cultures albeit a nation’s previous history of regulation.45 ‘
44
45
Id.
David Morton, “Gunning for the World,” Foreign Policy, no. 152 (2006): 66
Leone
15
B. 1994 Assault Weapon Ban and its Implications on U.S. Gun Legislation and
Violence
On September 13, 1994, Congress passed the Violent Crime Control and Law
Enforcement Act of 1994; under Title XI – Firearms, this act contained the Public Safety
and Recreational Firearms Use Protection Act, referred to as the Federal Assault
Weapons Ban which was signed by then-President Bill Clinton.46 Here, the Federal
Assault Weapons Ban ties into the jurisprudence of the previous section, for the ban
stands as the last attempt at substantive, national firearm regulation before the ruling of
D.C. v Heller. Following the new precedent in Heller and McDonald, it is challenging for
the federal government to enact national firearm regulations without infringing on one’s
constitutional rights. While it is presently hard to pass something to the same degree as
the Federal Assault Weapons Ban, the Court made clear in Heller that “the Second
Amendment right is not unlimited;”47 as a result, there is a broad scope of possible
measures the American government could take to regulate gun ownership rather than
outright stripping certain guns from the hands of all gun owners. Altogether, this section
studies the effectiveness of the Federal Assault Weapons Ban and teases out flaws the
ban had that prevented it from operating substantially better.
First and foremost under section 110102, the Federal Assault Weapons Ban made it
illegal for a person “to manufacture, transfer, or possess a semi-automatic assault
weapon.”48 However, this first clause did not apply to the possession or transfer of any
semi-automatic assault weapon that was lawfully possessed on the date of the act’s
enactment and to any unlawful firearms specified in Appendix A of the act that were
46
Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act of 1994, H.R. Rep. No. 103-3355, at 201 (1994).
554 U.S. 571 (2008).
48
Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act of 1994, H.R. Rep. No. 103-3355, at 201 (1994).
47
Leone
16
manufactured on October 1, 1993.49 In defining a semi-automatic assault weapon, the act
stated “any of the firearms or copies or duplicates of the firearms in any caliber, known
as…” which then proceeded to cherry-pick the names of roughly nineteen gun models.50
Further, it concluded its list of unlawful guns by banning semi-automatic rifles, pistols,
and shotguns with the ability to accept a detachable magazine along with at least two
modifications to the gun, such as a folding or telescoping stock, or a pistol grip that
protrudes conspicuously beneath the action of the weapon, to name a few regulations.51
On the whole, by cherry-picking the types of gun models that would be banned, the
Federal Assault Weapons Ban assumes that these nineteen models are the largest cause of
mass shootings. The flaw here, however, is that the ban narrowly defined semi-automatic
assault weapons and restricted the definition to only nineteen gun models; therefore, gun
manufacturers could slightly alter the make of gun to circumvent the ban.
Afterwards, in section 110103, the Federal Assault Weapons Ban prohibited the
transfer and possession of large capacity ammunition feeding devices, but as with section
110102, the new law did not apply to the possession or transfer of large capacity
ammunition feeding devices on or before the date of enactment.52 While it is problematic
for the overall potency of the gun regulation that the law did not apply to guns purchased
before the date of enactment, it is impossible to make possible in the U.S. as it would
constitute an ex post facto law. Consequently, large capacity ammunition feeding devices
were defined as “a magazine, belt, drum, feed strip, or similar device manufactured after
the date of enactment… that has a capacity of, or that can be readily restored or converted
49
Id at 202.
Id at 202-3.
51
Id at 203.
52
Id at 204.
50
Leone
17
to accept, more than 10 rounds of ammunition.”53 In all, before ending the act with an
appendix of all the gun model names that were banned, section 110105 stipulated that the
amendments would take effect on the date of the enactment of the Violent Crime Control
and Law Enforcement Act of 1994 and would be repealed ten years after said date.54
In analyzing both the benefits and shortcomings of the Federal Assault Weapons Ban,
this thesis looks to the flawed nature of the ban before moving on to discuss its actual
implications on gun violence and culture. Writing immediately after the passage of the
ban in 1994, Craig Albert, an associate law professor at Seton Hall University in the
1990s, argued that the assault weapons ban would not work due to a major loophole in
the substance of the law that assured there would be no federal prosecutions for assault
weapon possession.55 Because the law held that it was legal for citizens to possess or
transfer an assault weapon that was lawfully owned preceding the passage of the ban, the
U.S. government would have to prove the entire chain of custody of the weapon in
question, yet there is no national recordkeeping requirement for gun sales at a federal
level making it burdensome for law enforcement to identify offenders.56 Furthermore, the
expiration of the ban ten years after its enactment also debilitates the effectiveness of the
assault weapons ban as it only acted as a ten-year ban on the manufacture and
importation of said weapons.57 In reality, the restrictions on the Federal Assault Weapons
Ban’s effectiveness resulted from the pro-gun lobby groups and politicians that forced the
ban to retain numerous caveats restricting its increased success. On top of the flaws
53
Id.
Id at 205.
55
Craig J. Albert, “Assault Weapons Ban Just Won’t Work,” The New York Times, September 16, 1994,
https://www.nytimes.com/1994/09/16/opinion/l-assault-weapons-ban-just-won-t-work260967.html?module=inline.
56
Id.
57
Id.
54
Leone
18
mentioned by Albert, the gravest error of the Federal Assault Weapons Ban was failing to
put forth an accurate, concise definition of assault weapons that could apply across the
board to all gun manufacturers, so instead, the lawmakers had to pick and choose which
models and brands would be excluded.58
This was not the first time historically that a failure to define assault weapons had
muddled gun control policy and led to loopholes in the legislation rendering it not as
effective. In writing in 1992 on the nature of assault weapons and the NRA’s enormous
strength in molding public opinion towards them, Josh Sugarmann argued that the
increased popularity of semi-automatic assault weapons appealed to the worst instincts of
gun owners following the Stockton massacre in 1989.59 Here, Patrick Purdy, who was a
24 year old with an extensive history of drugs and weapons, entered Stockton’s
Cleveland Elementary School armed with an AK-47 and a 9mm Taurus pistol killing five
children and wounding 29 others.60 Purdy had legally purchased the AK-47 in Oregon
and purchased the pistol in California; since he had never committed a felony, he was
able to purchase these guns with no red flags raised about his criminal behavior.61 As a
result, following the events of Stockton, assault weapons became entrenched in debate
that led to a stalemate in policy as the NRA challenged any ordinance passed towards
stricter gun laws.
While semi-automatic firearms could be purchased as easily as a hunting rifle since
they did not fall under the National Firearms Act, their massive capacity to kill and their
58
Asher Stockler, “Clinton-Era Assault Weapons Ban Did Work, According to New Research,” Newsweek,
September 28, 2019, https://www.newsweek.com/assault-weapons-ban-1994-gun-rights-1461951.
59
Josh Sugarmann, National Rifle Association: Money-Firepower-Fear (District of Columbia: Violence
Policy Center, 1992) 202.
60
Id 201.
61
Id 202.
Leone
19
appeal to paramilitary groups, gang members, and drug dealers led to public outcry for
restrictions on the nature of semi-automatic weapons.62 While the NRA continued to
crush any legislation from arising in Congress that would limit semi-automatic weapons
rights by sending politically charged warnings to their base of supporters, the DeConcini
bill, drafted by Arizona Democrat Dennis DeConcini, was raised in 1990 calling for the
ban of nine specifically named foreign and domestic assault weapons.63 By specifically
naming the brands and makes of assault weapons that would be banned, the bill could
easily be circumvented if companies developed slightly different guns with different
names, so when voted upon in May 1990, the bill was swiftly defeated.64 Nonetheless,
this error of failing to define semi-automatic weapons and instead naming models and
brands that would be banned was reiterated in the Federal Assault Weapons Ban four
years later. Taking this into account, in determining the future of gun policy in the U.S.,
politicians should be cognizant that watered down legislation will do nothing to fix the
issue of gun violence. On the other end, extreme gun control policies that attempt to ball
all guns, not just semi-automatic or automatic weapons, are also infeasible as they violate
Second Amendment rights. Thus, policies have to be pursued that allow gun owners to
maintain their right while also making sure that firearms are properly regulated as to not
be utilized for mass shootings or incessant violence.
The federal government in 1993 also attempted to prevent the rapid sale of guns to
citizens who constituted a potential threat by enacting the Brady Act, which required
federally licensed firearms dealers to conduct background check on all potential firearm
62
Id 203-5.
Id 213.
64
Id.
63
Leone
20
purchasers.65 This tied into the pre-Heller view of the Second Amendment, for the
government was allowed to regulate civilian’s ownership of firearms without infringing
upon Second Amendment rights. To comply with the Brady Act, the FBI instituted the
National Instant Criminal Background Check System (NICS), a centralized category of
national records that contains information about individuals’ criminal and mental health
histories as well as any civil order entered against them that may affect their eligibility of
buying or owning a gun.66
Lastly, in light of both the legal language of the Federal Assault Weapons Ban and
arguments against its effectiveness, this thesis now analyzes statistical data conducted by
John Donohue and Theodora Boulouta in 2019 which determines the influence that the
Federal Assault Weapons Ban had in reducing the extent of gun violence and mass
shootings in the U.S.67 In defining a mass shooting as an incident where a gunman
massacres at least six people in public while excluding crimes of armed robbery and gang
or domestic violence, they found that compared with the decade before the Federal
Assault Weapons Ban’s adoption there was a 25% drop in gun massacres (from eight to
six) and a 40% drop in fatalities (from 81 to 49) during the period of the ban.68 Since
assault weapons are legal in 43 states and large-capacity magazines capable of holding
more than 10 rounds are legal in 41 states, it is evident that the ban impeded the easy
access to this lethal weaponry.69 Now, despite overall violent crime rates descending in
65
18 U.S.C. § 922(s).
Giffords Law Center, “Background Check Procedures,” Giffords Law Center to Prevent Gun Violence,
2019, https://lawcenter.giffords.org/gun-laws/policy-areas/background-checks.
67
John Donohue and Theodora Boulouta, “That Assault Weapon Ban? It Really Did Work,” The New York
Times, September 4, 2019, https://www.nytimes.com/2019/09/04/opinion/assault-weaponban.html?smid=nytcore-ios-share.
68
Id.
69
Id.
66
Leone
21
the U.S., the proliferation of incredibly powerful assault weapons a decade after the
expiration of the ban has been met with a baffling 347% increase in fatalities in gun
massacres.70 More shockingly, in the past five years since 2014, the average number of
people who die in a gun massacre has increased by 81%, and at least 234 of the 271
people who have died in gun massacres since 2014 were killed by weapons previously
prohibited under the federal assault weapons ban as 11 of the 15 gun massacres have
involved an assault weapon.71 Based on the success of the Federal Assault Weapons Ban
in reducing the prevalence and magnitude of mass shootings in the U.S., Donohue and
Boulouta conclude:
“We should enact a comprehensive federal assault weapons ban and limit on high-capacity
magazines, repeal the federal immunity statute and create a more comprehensive and effective
background check and red-flag system to ensure that the growing power of advanced weaponry is
not readily available to dangerous individuals.”72
Clearly, the Federal Assault Weapons Ban succeeded in alleviating the loss of life caused
by the spreading and misuse of semi-automatic weapons. Though the ban retained certain
flaws that the pro-gun politicians and lobbyists infused it with, the radically heightened
degree and breadth of mass shootings and their lethality in the present day proves that
some degree of imperfect regulation is better than nothing at all. The question remains,
however, why there have been no substantive attempts at increasing regulation.
Ultimately, this issue boils down to the state of politics in the U.S. With radical gun
rights groups on one side and extremist gun control groups on the other constantly
attracting the most attention, it is challenging for policies to be pursued that strike
70
Id.
Id.
72
Id.
71
Leone
22
between the two sides, for these extremes are what draw the most media attention and
guide public debates.
C. The Current State of Gun Violence and Policy in the U.S.
The United States ranks first in the world for private firearm ownership with an
estimated total number of civilian guns, both licit and illicit, ranging from 265,000,000 to
393,347,000 as of 2017 figures.73 In taking into account population differences by
comparing the rate of civilian firearm possession per 100 people in the U.S. and
Australia, Australia pales in comparison to the United States, which boasts a rate of 120.5
privately owned firearms per 100 people to Australia’s 13.7 per 100.74,75 This alone
suggests an immense cultural difference. Lacking a Second Amendment equivalent,
Australia has managed to enact radically stricter gun laws than the United States without
the possibility of the High Court of Australia striking it down on some constitutional
claim.
Philip Alpers, Amélie Rossetti and Daniel Salinas, “United States – Gun Facts, Figures and the Law,”
Sydney School of Public Health, The University of Sydney, GunPolicy.org, 2019.
74
Id.
75
Johnathan Masters, “U.S. Gun Policy: Global Comparisons,” Council on Foreign Relations, Updated
August 6, 2019, https://www.cfr.org/backgrounder/us-gun-policy-global-comparisons.
73
Leone
23
Figure 1.76
As of 2020 so far, the United States retains no federal laws “banning semi-automatic
weapons, military-style .50 caliber rifles, handguns, or large-capacity magazines,” and in
relation to this it also has the highest homicide-by-firearm rate among the world’s most
developed nations.77 With a lack of federal regulations on firearms, states retain the right
to regulate firearms within the scope of the Second Amendment. Subsequently, in
spelling out these disparities between different states’ regulations on firearms, it is first
important to note that from 1991 to 2016 there was an observed 57% increase in the
number of enacted state firearm provisions nationwide; however, this increase can only
be attributed to the actions of a few states (CT, CA, MA, MD, and NY) as most other
Alpers, Rossetti and Salinas, “Rate of Civilian Firearm Possession,” chart, GunPolicy.org, 2019,
https://www.gunpolicy.org/firearms/compare/194/rate_of_civilian_firearm_possession/10.
77
Masters, “U.S. Gun Policy,” Updated August 6, 2019.
76
Leone
24
states only had slight increases, and sixteen states even repealed more provisions than
were enacted.78 This speaks wonders to the failure of numerous states in combating gun
violence and monitoring the backgrounds of individuals who purchase a gun, for in some
states an individual is capable of purchasing a semi-automatic rifle in less than 10
minutes.79
The main way the government regulates which individuals can purchase a gun is
through a background check enforced by the National Instant Criminal Background
Check System. Under the Brady Bill, all licensed sellers are required to conduct a
background check of potential buyers before selling them a firearm. The largest flaw with
the federal background check requirement, however, is that it allows unlicensed sellers,
whether online, at gun shows, or anywhere else without a federal dealer’s license, to
transfer firearms without running any background check and with no questions asked.80
This is a problem because guns are not toys; if individuals attempt to purchase guns who
are prohibited from doing so due to criminal charges, sellers should know this to avoid
giving guns to dangerous individuals. With an estimated 22% of U.S. gun owners
acquiring their most recent firearm without any background check, this means that
millions of Americans are stockpiling millions of guns without any regulation on the
character and history of the gun owner.81 On top of this, 80% of all firearms bought with
the intent of committing criminal actions are done so through unlicensed sellers, and 96%
of criminals with previous gun offenses that are prohibited from possessing a firearm are
Jane McClenathan, Molly Pahn and Michael Siegel, “The Changing Landscape of U.S. Gun Policy: State
Firearm Laws, 1991-2016,” Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, 2016, vii.
79
See Helen Ubinas, “I bought an AR-15 semi-automatic rifle in Philly in 7 minutes,” The Philadelphia
Inquirer, June 13, 2016. https://www.inquirer.com/philly/columnists/helen_ubinas.
80
Giffords Law Center, “Universal Background Checks,” 2019.
81
Matthew Miller, Lisa Hepburn and Deborah Azrael, “Firearm Acquisition Without Background
Checks,” Annals of Internal Medicine 166, no. 4 (2017): 233–239.
78
Leone
25
able to easily circumvent the background check as a result of unlicensed sellers’ lack of
questioning or regulation.82 While 21 states including Washington D.C. have extended
the background check requirement beyond federal law to private sales in varying degrees,
the other remaining 29 states have failed to reconcile the issue. This dichotomy of each
state’s gun legislation is the driving factor preventing consequential action from being
taken to reduce mass shootings in the U.S.
Figure 2. Firearm-related mortality rates, legislative strength scores, and total firearm deaths in the United States, 2007 through
2010.83
The states with the least laws had an absolute rate difference of 6.64 firearm-related
deaths/100,000 per year compared to 0.40 firearm-related deaths/100,000 per year in
states with the most laws.84 While the question of culture at a national level is critical in
juxtaposing the U.S. with Australia, it is important not to underplay the culture and
Giffords Law Center, “Universal Background Checks,” 2019.
Id 735.
84
Id 735-6.
82
83
Leone
26
attitudes towards firearms at a state level, for Fleegler et al. notes that differences in
states’ culture “may confound the association between firearm ownership and firearm
legislation.”85
Altogether, the current state of gun violence and policy in the United States is one of
continued violence with trivial policy responses. Nevertheless, recent public opinion polls
by Pew Research are fairly telling of how Americans are shifting towards a mindset of
supporting some gun regulations.86As reproduced in the chart below, the majority of
individuals from both conservative and liberal backgrounds support gun regulations that
prevent mentally ill individuals from buying guns, require background checks at private
sales, and bar people who are on federal no-fly watch lists from buying a gun.87 Even
though both sides cannot come to an agreement on all aspects of firearm regulation, it’s
important to capitalize on this area of agreement to pursue policies that make guns safer
without infringing on one’s rights. However, despite public opinion showing one thing,
it’s important to take into account the powerful actors that shape the gun control debate
such as the NRA. By embodying these partisan interests that may run counter to public
opinion, the NRA uses its political clout to staunchly defend a hardline view of the
Second Amendment.
85
Id 739.
Pew Research Center, “Gun Policy Remains Divisive, But Several Proposals Still Draw Bipartisan
Support,” October 18, 2018, https://www.people-press.org/2018/10/18/gun-policy-remains-divisive-butseveral-proposals-still-draw-bipartisan-support/.
87
Id.
86
Leone
27
Altogether, the concern is at what point will our American government and all of its
citizens come together as a unified front to tackle this issue? While Americans struggle to
combat this issue on their home front, it is obvious the tweets of “thoughts and prayers to
the victims’ families” will not reconcile the problem, so American politicians must
reexamine the laws and culture while looking towards neighboring countries to figure out
Leone
28
what concrete coping mechanisms may work.88 In the present leadup to the 2020
Presidential Election, many Democratic candidates had established plans for gun control.
With Joe Biden as the Democratic candidate, he has previously expressed interest in
pushing to create universal background check, to reinstate the assault weapons ban, and
to enact a voluntary buyback program of assault weapons.89 As the election rapidly
approaches, it will be interesting to see if gun control is raised in any manner throughout
debates and if any substantive action is achieved following the election’s results.
Toor, “United States vs. Everybody,” 2018.
Matt Viser and Felicia Sonmez, “Joe Biden releases gun plan that would reinstate assault weapons ban
and establish a voluntary buyback program,” The Washington Post, October 2, 2019,
https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/.
88
89
Leone
29
Chapter II: Down Under! The History of Australian Gun Violence
A. History of Gun Legislation and Violence in Australia before Port Arthur
Before analyzing Australia’s unique history of gun legislation, violence, and culture,
it is necessary to lay out the scholarly understanding of what defines a mass shooting. In
briefly clarifying how the definition of a mass shooting has evolved through time, Philip
Alpers explains how a mass shooting was understood in the 1990s:
“The common definition of a ‘mass shooting’ in 1996 was five or more victims killed by gunshot
in proximate events in a civilian setting, not including any perpetrator(s) killed by their own hand
or otherwise. This excludes most of Australia’s more common firearm-related spousal and family
violence killings.”90
Since 2013, the United States has reduced the general baseline for mass shootings in
Public Law 112-265 to “three or more killings in a single incident” following President
Obama’s authorization of the act.91,92 It is important for this thesis to clarify the
commonly understood definition of a mass shooting as it is a narrowly defined term that
ignores domestic firearm violence and firearm-related suicide. In line with this
interpretation of mass shootings, this thesis will only briefly cover the impact of mass
shootings in domestic settings and will leave it up to future research.
Unlike the United States of America, the trajectory of gun legislation, violence, and
culture in Australia is an entirely different story. Before the events of the Port Arthur
Massacre on April 28, 1996, Australia’s history of mass shootings was one of intense
violence and government inaction, which closely resembles the United States’ past and
90
Id.
An Act to amend title 28, United States Code, to clarify the statutory authority for the longstanding
practice of the Department of Justice of providing investigatory assistance on request of State and local
authorities with respect to certain serious violent crimes, and for other purposes, Public Law 112-265,
Investigative Assistance for Violent Crimes Act of 2012 (2013): 1.
92
For all intents and purposes of this thesis, mass shootings after 2013 are understood as three fatalities,
whereas data before 2013 is only considered for those with five or more fatalities.
91
Leone
30
present dilemma with gun violence. From 1980 up until, but not including, the Port
Arthur Massacre, there were 13 mass shootings that took a combined 82 lives.93 Of these
13 mass shootings, nine involved men shooting people they knew previously with the
remaining four consisting of gunmen in public places killing total strangers.94 Juxtaposed
with the U.S., from 1982-1996 in the United States, there was a total of 21 mass
shootings that afflicted the U.S. nation claiming a total of 173 lives.95 Of these shootings,
two resulted in more than 20 civilian fatalities in one setting: The San Ysidro
McDonald’s Massacre96 and The Luby’s Massacre.97 Despite the United States having a
population nearly fifteen times that of Australia during this time period, on a per capita
basis of mass homicides per 100,000 people, mass killings accounted for a larger share of
total homicide-related deaths in Australia than in the United States.98 Instead of ignoring
the underlying issues of firearm violence at hand in their society and thinking that law
reform would be inevitable, Australians employed the “strategic use of media and other
forms of advocacy to convert anger and outrage into action.”99
Philip Alpers and Zareh Ghazarian, "The ‘perfect storm’ of gun control: From policy inertia to world
leader," in Successful Public Policy: Lessons from Australia and New Zealand, eds. Luetjens Joannah,
Mintrom Michael, and Hart Paul’t (Acton ACT, Australia: ANU Press, 2019),
www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctvh4zj6k.16, 208.
94
Simon Chapman, Over Our Dead Bodies: Port Arthur and Australia’s fight for gun control (Reprint,
Sydney: Sydney University Press, 2013), 114.
95
Mark Follman, Gavin Aronsen and Deanna Pan, “US Mass Shootings, 1982-2019,” Updated: February
26, 2020.
96
On July 18, 1984, James Oliver Huberty opened fire in a McDonald’s restaurant with a legally purchased
semi-automatic handgun, assault rifle, and shotgun. He killed 22 people and injured 19 before Huberty was
shot dead by a police officer. “US Mass Shootings, 1982-2019,” Mother Jones, Updated: December 11,
2019.
97
On October 16, 1991, George Hennard drove his pickup truck into a Luby’s cafeteria in Killeen, Texas.
He then used two legally purchased semi-automatic handguns to kill 24 people and injure 20 before
committing suicide. “US Mass Shootings, 1982-2019,” Mother Jones, Updated: December 11, 2019.
98
“Between 1989-90 and 2000-01, mass murders accounted for 3 percent of all homicides in Australia.”
Peter Reuter and Jenny Mouzos, “Australia: A Massive Buy Back of Low-Risk Guns,” in Evaluating Gun
Policy: Effects on Crime and Violence, eds. Jens Ludwig, and Philip J. Cook (Washington, D.C.: Brookings
Institution Press, 2003), 127.
99
Chapman, Over Our Dead Bodies, 9.
93
Leone
31
Gun control advocacy in Australia did not emerge out of the blue following the
Port Arthur Massacre; it had been slowly growing for decades beforehand. Following the
murders of Margaret Bacsa and Ella Rosvoll in the late 1960s in Victoria, the Committee
to Register all Guns was set up by members of the public to combat what they viewed as
a growing problem.100 In the years that followed, public advocacy of gun control in
Australia persisted to gain steam with groups like the Council to Control Gun Misuse in
Victoria attempting to lobby the state government in the early 1980s.101 By the time of
the Port Arthur Massacre, Coalitions for Gun Control had already been established in
three of the Australian states: Tasmania, Victoria, and New South Wales.102 Simon
Chapman charts this progression of public opinion and depicts, “These years of
advocacy, supplemented by efforts from a diverse range of health, legal, academic,
church, trade union, women’s and community groups, had established widespread public
support for the main platforms of gun control.”103 As seen within the public opinion polls
of Table 1 reproduced below, public support for gun control across Australia was
exceptionally high both before and after the Port Arthur Massacre.
100
Id., 100
Id.
102
Id., 101
103
Id.
101
Leone
32
Table 1: Australian Surveys of Community Opinion About Gun Control104
Why then was there no substantial action undertaken on a national scale in
Australia to counteract the publicly recognized issue of gun violence? As Australia’s gun
policy remained stagnant, countries across the globe were implementing gun control
measures. In November 1988, the United Kingdom implemented the Firearms
104
Id., 101-102
Leone
33
(Amendment) Act 1988 banning some “specially dangerous weapons”105 immediately
following the Hungerford massacre in August 1987.106 Similarly, the Canadian
Government passed gun registration laws tightening control of firearms in 1995.107 Even
the United States enacted some degree of national gun control before Australia as the
1994 Assault Weapons Ban was passed restricting the sale of newly manufactured or
imported assault rifles.108
The problem in passing national uniform firearm legislation in Australia was a
result of the division of powers between the states and the territories, and the national
government. As Alpers and Ghazarian note, “State and territory governments hold
constitutional authority over the provision of law and order, while the Commonwealth
has authority to ban the importation of firearms under its customs regulations.”109 The
Australian Constitution spells out this separation of powers between state and territory
governments and the national government. In Chapter V of the Australian Constitution,
the power of state parliaments is reserved,110 and the legitimacy of a state’s laws is
upheld as long as it is not “inconsistent with a law of the Commonwealth.”111 In the
context of firearm legislation however, it was impossible for a state’s gun laws to be
“inconsistent with the law of the Commonwealth,” for the Australian Parliament did not
have this power vested in the Constitution. Under the section entitled “Powers of the
Parliament” in the Australian Constitution, the Australian Parliament has powers ranging
105
Firearms (Amendment) Act 1988, UK Public General Acts, c. 45.
On August 19, 1987, Michael Robert Ryan shot and killed 16 people using a handgun and two semiautomatic rifles before taking his own life.
107
Alpers and Ghazarian, “The ‘perfect storm’ of gun control,” 213.
108
Refer back to Ch. I: Section B. for 1994 Assault Weapon Ban.
109
Alpers and Ghazarian, “The ‘perfect storm’ of gun control,” 213.
110
AUS Const. Ch. V, §107.
111
AUS Const. Ch. V, §109.
106
Leone
34
from trade and commerce to astrological and meteorological observations, yet nowhere is
it included that the Australian Parliament has the power to regulate firearms.112 Further,
unlike the United States’ right to bear arms being embedded in the Second Amendment,
Australian citizens did not have an equivalent right under the Commonwealth
Constitution that preserved their right to bear arms.113 Resultantly, firearm legislation
varied across the states and territories before Port Arthur. Depending on the state,
ammunition sales were largely unrestricted, semi-automatic weapons were legal, and
registration of most firearms was not required.114 Overall, despite the best efforts of some
states in counteracting the issue of gun violence with regulation, it was the ineptitude of
others that prevented any substantive national degree of regulation from being enacted.
Before the aftermath of Port Arthur in 1996, gun control laws intensely varied
between Australian states. While states like Western Australia, New South Wales, South
Australia, and Victoria took action to regulate firearms, states like Queensland and
Tasmania took no action at all. In regulating firearms, Roger Douglas expresses the
central regulative devices that states would employ:
“The major regulatory devices include provisions for licensing of shooters, requirements that firearms
be registered and that transfers of ownership be notified to the Registrar, requirements that people
acquiring particular firearms possess permits in relation to those firearms, rules restricting access to
particular kinds of firearms, and rules with respect to the training of shooters and the safe-keeping of
firearms. In general, regimes whose rules are restrictive in some respects are restrictive in others.”115
112
AUS Const. Ch. I, Part V, §51.
Jennifer Norberry, Derek Woolner, and Kirsty Magarey, “After Port Arthur – Issues of Gun Control in
Australia,” Parliament of Australia, May 7, 1996,
https://www.aph.gov.au/About_Parliament/Parliamentary_Departments/Parliamentary_Library/Publication
s_Archive/CIB/cib9596/96cib16#National%20uniform%20gun%20laws.
114
Alpers and Ghazarian, “The ‘perfect storm’ of gun control,” 213.
115
Roger Douglas, “Gun Laws and Sudden Death: Do They Make Much Difference?” The Australian
Quarterly 69, no. 1 (1997): 51, https://www.jstor.org/stable/20634765.
113
Leone
35
For example, since 1931, Western Australia required licenses for each firearm; it
proceeded to strengthen its legislation in 1974 and required that “licensees have good
reason for being licensed.”116 On top of this, in 1981, Western Australia also restricted
the access to semi-automatic weapons.117 In a similar manner, New South Wales
introduced a shooter’s license requirement in 1975 before continuing to augment the
1975 “fit and proper requirement” with a “good reasons” requirement in 1986.118 New
South Wales even prepared to set up a registration system in 1988, but it was inevitably
repealed following the change in state government.119 These endeavors on the part of
some states in enacting firearm regulation laws is worth mentioning here, for their efforts
were not matched on a uniform basis across Australia. In Queensland and Tasmania, the
law surrounding firearms remained almost completely unchanged with only some slight
adjustments to the extent of people forbidden from owning a gun. Before the 1990s,
neither Queensland nor Tasmania required a license to own a gun, 120 making it incredibly
easy for potentially dangerous individuals to buy guns and bring them across state lines
where a more stringent state’s laws would have prevented them from completing the
purchase.
It was not until December 22, 1987, when the Australian Commonwealth finally
attempted to face the issue of gun violence head-on. Prime Minister Bob Hawke of the
Australian Labor Party had been in power since 1983. During his time as prime minister,
Australia was reeling from several high-profile mass shootings in the late 1980s and early
116
Id.
Id., 52.
118
Id., 51.
119
Id.
120
Id.
117
Leone
36
1990s. Most notably, the shock from the Hoddle Street killings121 in Melbourne of
August 1987 and the Queen Street killings,122 also in Melbourne, of December 1987
finally managed to push the national government into attempted action.123 On December
22, 1987, Prime Minister Bob Hawke convened a National Gun Summit hoping to
achieve a consensus on national gun laws or a possible national ban on military-style
semi-automatic weapons.124 Nonetheless, the conference was a failure as no consensus
was reached due to Queensland and Tasmania’s refusal to participate in a national
agreement.125 Frustrated about this policy stalemate, the New South Wales Premier at the
time, Barrie Unsworth, left the National Gun Summit in 1987 ironically claiming, “It will
take a massacre in Tasmania before we get gun law reform in Australia.”126 Despite the
growing salience of high-profile mass shootings in the late 1980s and early 1990s, it was
this opposition from a minority of Australian states that prevented the majority from
undertaking any national action towards regulating firearms.
The National Gun Summit did however spur a new wave of research about
firearms and violence in Australia. Conducted by the Australian Institute of Criminology
in February 1988, the first major study regarding the availability of firearms in Australia
attempted to provide basic information and statistics about firearm availability before
121
On August 9, 1987, 19-year-old Julian Knight shot at passing cars from a nature strip on Hoddle Street
killing 7 people and injuring 19 others before being caught.
122
On December 8, 1987, 22-year-old Frank Vitkovic visited a former friend in an office building before he
proceeded to shoot and kill 8 people there with a sawn-off M1 carbine. He jumped to his death from the
building after his gun was wrestled away by civilians present.
123
Alpers and Ghazarian, “The ‘perfect storm’ of gun control,” 214.
124
Chapman, Over Our Dead Bodies, 102.
125
Alpers and Ghazarian, “The ‘perfect storm’ of gun control,” 214.
126
Barrie Unsworth, “Failure on guns an affront,” Sydney Morning Herald, May 10, 1996.
Leone
37
considering policy options.127 For starters, the survey acknowledged the lack of
“accurate, reliable, uniform and timely statistical data on the availability of firearms in
Australia and their use in crime.”128 In an attempt to reconcile this lack of information
about firearms, the study estimated that there was “at least 3.5 million guns of all types –
registered, unregistered, licensed and unlicensed, in the hands of private citizens – in
Australia;”129 similar to the United States’ present situation where research about
firearms can only speculate the total number of firearms because of the lack of a national
registration system, Australian firearm researchers also had a challenging time
deciphering the total number of firearms in circulation due to the same issue.
Furthermore, the study also discovered that more than a quarter of all Australian
households were found to possess a gun with Queensland and Tasmania having the
highest percentage of armed households.130 It’s unsurprising that Queensland and
Tasmania had the highest rates of gun ownership as prospective gun buyers in these two
states were not required at the time to go through any licensing or training procedure
before purchasing a gun. Because of these nonexistent regulations in Queensland and
Tasmania, the rationale was that stricter laws would effectively achieve some substantive
decline in the states that had stricter legislation, yet in comparing the rates of gun
violence between states, Roger Douglas found that more stringent measures may not
correlate to less gun violence in a state.131
Duncan Chappell, Peter Grabosky, Paul Wilson, and Satyanshu Mukherjee, “Firearms and violence in
Australia,” Trends & issues in crime and criminal justice, no. 10 (Canberra: Australian Institute of
Criminology, 1988): 1.
128
Id.
129
Id.
130
Id.
131
Douglas, “Gun Laws and Sudden Death,” 52.
127
Leone
38
A separate study conducted by Roger Douglas in 1997 sought to scrutinize the
role that stricter state legislation had in lowering firearm violence in said state.
Juxtaposing the lax laws of Queensland and Tasmania against the tougher regulations of
the other states, Douglas compared “the death rates and percentage gun use measures in
the states in which the law has changed with rates in states in which the law stayed more
or less constant, namely Queensland and Tasmania.”132 On the whole, Douglas found
that:
“The data provide some support for the proposition that stricter gun homicide laws affect gun
homicide rates, less for the proposition that they affect the degree to which guns are used in
homicides and none to suggest that stricter laws affect overall homicide rates. They provide
slightly stronger support for the proposition that stricter laws reduce gun suicides and the use of
guns in suicides (except in the Northern Territory), but none to suggest that they affect overall
suicide rates. Stricter laws do not appear to affect gun accident death rates.”133
Hence, in dividing the average annual death rates and gun death percentages of states by
their Queensland equivalent, Table 2 illustrates Douglas’ conclusion that the proliferation
and deregulated nature of firearms in Queensland did not entail more firearm violence in
Queensland than most other states with more regulative schemes:134
132
Id., 56.
Id.
134
Id., 55.
133
Leone
39
Leone
40
With regard to Douglas’ final claims, while it is statistically true that less firearm
regulations did not necessarily result in more gun violence in Queensland compared to
the stricter states, Douglas’ argument ignores a critical factor of gun regulation
emphasized by the Australian Institute of Criminology: uniformity of regulation. Even
though it was mentioned earlier how New South Wales was one of few Australian states
that took extensive measures to regulate firearms and firearm sales, homicides committed
with a firearm in 1986 constituted a 44.2 per cent majority of all total murders reported to
police in New South Wales.135 To comprehend why states with stricter gun laws still
experienced high levels of gun violence, Chappell et al. explain that it is the lack of
effective enforcement and uniformity in Australia’s national gun laws that causes the
negligence of one state to neutralize the constructive efforts of others.136
Before Port Arthur, the police forces of each state took drastically different ways
of administering the firearms laws, so Chappell et al. portray, “Standard operating
procedures for all Australian police forces would enhance the possibility of an effective
enforcement system.137 Moreover, they acknowledge that the total disappearance of
firearms from Australia would not eliminate violence; however, a reduction in firearm
numbers and further restrictions on the availability of firearms on a uniform scale would
reduce considerable death and injury.138 The issue of different firearm legislation from
one state to the next is that, as was the case in 1987, a weapon purchased legally in
Queensland was used to kill people in the Northern Territory and Western Australia
where legislation in these victim states would have prevented the buyer from purchasing
Chappell et al., “Firearms and violence in Australia,” 2.
Id., 3-4.
137
Id., 3.
138
Id.
135
136
Leone
41
said weapon.139 Altogether, the recognition of a need for universal firearms laws “poised
[Australia] on the brink of change with regard to its firearms policies,” but it would not
be until the atrocity of Port Arthur where this change would finally come to fruition.
Although no national measures were taken, following the National Gun Summit
most states, including Tasmania and Queensland, did make some improvements to their
gun laws. After suffering the Hoddle Street and Queen Street massacres, Victoria
tightened restrictions on semi-automatic long-arms.140 As was previously mentioned,
New South Wales tried to overhaul its gun laws between 1985 and 1988 by implementing
a gun registration system but did so to no avail; the interesting aspect of New South
Wales’ proposed registration system is that a very similar scheme would eventually be
adopted nationally following the Port Arthur Massacre.141 Finally, Queensland in 1990
and Tasmania in 1991 passed similar laws that were the first of their kind in these states
regulating rifles and shotguns and requiring a license to own or buy guns.142 The National
Gun Summit of 1987 began the steadier push towards gun regulation. While Tasmania
and Queensland had made progress at the state level, their new licensing requirements
were still flawed as it did not require buyers to demonstrate a good reason for wanting a
license and also allowed a license to be valid for life.143 In sum, in spite of Prime Minister
Bob Hawke’s best attempts at corralling the states into a uniform set of firearm
regulations, the discrepancies between states’ policies left holes in the national system
139
Id.
Chapman, Over Our Dead Bodies, 103.
141
Id.
142
Id.
143
Douglas, “Gun Laws and Sudden Death,” 51-52.
140
Leone
42
that were only met with increased violence as the Australian Commonwealth could do
nothing but plead for action from each and every state.
Consequently, the issue of firearm legislation haunted PM Hawke and
overshadowed his government’s policy agenda.144 After 11 more people were killed in
mass shootings in Sydney between August 1990 and August 1991, the media interest in
the government’s response to this crisis was intense.145 Then, in August 1991, Hawke
lamented on national television about the national government’s inability to take any
action; Hawke affirmed:
“[U]nder the Constitution it requires the action and laws of the State governments and what
I’m saying to you is that due to a lack of political will within the states the governments that
have got the responsibility who must pass the laws won’t do it… I can’t change the
Constitution. I have not got the constitutional power to pass laws.”146
All in all, Hawke reminded the Australia public that gun control, was a power that could
be exercised by the states not the Commonwealth Government.147 Despite demonstrating
initiative to push for change, Hawke lost the support of the Australian Labor Party, and
Paul Keating assumed the role of prime minister in December 1991.148 Like Hawke, PM
Paul Keating could not ensure uniform gun laws even as political pressure intensified
with more gun violence in Sydney of August 1993.149 Eventually, in March 1996, the
federal election was held, and the Australian Labor Party lost 31 of its seats ending its 13
years in power.150 In place of Keating, John Howard of the Liberal Party won by a
landslide claiming 94 seats.151 While neither major party promised uniform gun laws
Alpers and Ghazarian, “The ‘perfect storm’ of gun control,” 214.
Id.
146
Id., 214-215.
147
Id., 215.
148
Id.
149
Id.
150
Id., 216.
151
Id.
144
145
Leone
43
during this 1996 election, the impact of the Port Arthur Massacre one month after the
federal election would demand action.
This section has gone to great lengths in detailing the confusing and jumbled
nature of firearm legislation in each of Australia’s states and territories. In relating this
pre-Port Arthur history and structure of gun laws to the current situation in the United
States, it’s clear that the U.S. presently suffers from the same lack of universal firearm
legislation across the country. Without proper, systematic regulation on the national level,
it makes it easier for disqualified buyers to travel to a state with less regulations and
acquire a gun with neither a background check nor training.152 Following the Port Arthur
Massacre, Australia determined that it was about time to deal with these discrepancies in
each state’s respective system by bringing them all together under one universal system.
B. Port Arthur Massacre and its Implications on Gun Legislation and Violence
Port Arthur, located in the Australian province of Tasmania, is the site of a historic
landmark of Australian culture.153 From 1833 to 1877, it served as a prison for the most
dangerous criminals that had broken the law again after already being shipped out of
Britain for breaking the law there.154 Now, Port Arthur is maintained by the Australian
Government and is a reminder of Australia’s roots as a penal colony.
On April 28, 1996, Martin Bryant, a 28-year-old with a history of violence and
mental illness, travelled to the historic site of Port Arthur killing 35 people and severely
Craig R. Whitney, Living with Guns: A Liberal’s Case for the Second Amendment (New York: Public
Affairs, 2012) 222-224.
153
Jack Rosewood, Martin Bryant: The Port Arthur Massacre (New York: Wiq Media, 2015) 1-2.
154
Id.
152
Leone
44
injuring 18 individuals in less than 24 hours.155 Though he used an AR-15, capable of
shooting 30 rounds before reloading, and a FN FAL, a semi-automatic rifle able to fire up
to 700 rounds a minute, to commit this destruction, Martin Bryant had legally purchased
these weapons leading up to the shooting.156 After an overnight standoff with the
Tasmanian police, Martin Bryant, in a fit, set the house he was camped in on fire the next
morning around 8:00am.157 Running out of the house with his clothes on fire, Bryant was
handcuffed and arrested by police before being sentenced at trial to 35 life sentences
without the possibility of parole as Australia does not have laws supporting capital
punishment.158 To this day, he is imprisoned in Risdon Prison in Tasmania and is under
intense security monitoring to ensure he does commit suicide.159
Immediately after the shooting, the event generated immense media attention with
news outlets describing the massacre as “the worst massacre by a single gunman in the
Australian history” and Martin Bryant as “the world’s worst lone mass killer.”160 As a
result, the aftermath of Port Arthur was met with an unprecedented outpouring of national
grief and anger. Particularly, Australians expressed frustration over the fact that
Australia’s weak firearm regulations continued to grant individuals access to rapid-fire,
military-style weapons like the ones Martin Bryant utilized.161 Only having been in office
for 57 days, Prime Minister John Howard responded forcefully the day after the murders
declaring his intention to introduce the “most sweeping gun control reforms ever
155
Chapman, Over Our Dead Bodies, 15.
Rosewood, Martin Bryant, 9,33.
157
Id., 57.
158
Id., 62-64.
159
Id., 70-72.
160
Chapman, Over Our Dead Bodies, 15-16.
161
Bob Howard, “Political Review: March 1996-September 1996,” The Australian Quarterly 68, no. 4
(1996): 118, https://www.jstor.org/stable/20634756.
156
Leone
45
contemplated by the Australian government.”162 Having witnessed the inability of the
national government to create effective firearm legislation in the decades before
becoming prime minister, Howard had always been critical of Australia’s gun laws.
During his time as opposition leader in 1995, Howard made powerful claims about his
desire to stop Australia from copying what he deemed as American gun culture; John
Howard said:
“I am firmly on the side of those who believe that it would be a cardinal tragedy if Australia did
not learn the bitter lessons of the United States regarding guns. I have no doubt that the horrific
homicide level in the United States is directly related to the plentiful supply of guns ... Whilst
making proper allowances for legitimate sporting and recreational activities and the proper needs
of our rural community, every effort should be made to limit the carrying of guns in Australia.”163
This rhetoric of avoiding a similar gun culture like that of the United States became a
central element of all advocacy for new gun laws, for political leaders, media
commentators, and even the general public demanded that Australia “must not to go
down the American path” of gun violence and culture.164 Although Australia’s police
ministers had met 20 times since 1980 to talk through uniform national gun laws, their
meetings always resulted in a lack of comprehensive national laws;165 the potency of the
Port Arthur killings pushed this standstill over the edge.
Prime Minister John Howard recognized that the Port Arthur Massacre provided
an opportunity for action, and Howard later explained:
“You never let a good crisis go to waste ... you do have to recognize that sometimes a crisis forces
people to focus on something ... tragic though the event was, it gave us an opportunity to do
something in the wake of it, so that those lives were not lost in vain.”166
162
Chapman, Over Our Dead Bodies, 16.
Alpers and Ghazarian, “The ‘perfect storm’ of gun control,” 216.
164
Chapman, Over Our Dead Bodies, 48.
165
Id., 60.
166
Alpers and Ghazarian, “The ‘perfect storm’ of gun control,” 218.
163
Leone
46
Therefore, in 12 days, the Howard Government meticulously persisted with its firearm
reform policy until it reached an agreement with the states and territories to introduce
national uniform gun laws.167 On May 10, 1996, at the Australasian Police Ministers’
Council (APMC), the National Firearms Agreement was agreed upon committing every
state and territory to pass laws in line with the demands of the resolution. The National
Firearms Agreement required:
1. A ban on the importation, ownership, sale, resale, transfer, possession, manufacture or use of:
• all self-loading center-fire rifles, whether military-style or not
• all self-loading and pump-action shotguns
• all self-loading rim-fire rifles.
o Exemptions for low-powered (rim-fire) self-loading .22s and pump-action
shotguns would be available to primary producers (farmers) who could satisfy
police that they had a ‘genuine need’ which could not be achieved by some other
means, or by non-prohibited weapons. A further exemption was added later to
permit some clay target shooters to own a semi-automatic shotgun. No other
‘sporting’ or competitive use of semi-automatic long-arms was to be allowed.
2. A compensatory ‘buyback’ scheme funded through an increase in the Medicare levy, whereby
gun owners would be paid the market value of any prohibited guns they handed in. Owners of
prohibited weapons would have 12 months to surrender their guns. After this amnesty,
penalties for illegal ownership would be severe.
3. The registration of all firearms as part of an integrated shooter licensing scheme, maintained
through the computerized National Exchange of Police Information (NEPI).
4. Shooter licensing based on a requirement to prove a ‘genuine reason’ for owning a firearm.
Genuine reason could include occupational uses such as stock and vermin control on farms;
demonstrated membership of an authorized target shooting club; or hunting when the
applicant could provide permission from a rural landowner. The APMC agreement explicitly
ruled out ‘personal protection’ or self-defense as a genuine reason to own a gun.
5. A licensing scheme based on five categories of firearms (A, B, C, D, H), minimum age of 18,
and criteria for a ‘fit and proper person’. These criteria would include compulsory
cancellation or refusal of licenses to people who have been convicted for violence or subject
to a domestic violence restraining order within the past five years.
6. New license applicants would need to undertake an accredited training course in gun safety.
7. As well as a license to own firearms, a separate permit would be required for each purchase of
a gun. Permit applications would be subject to a 28-day waiting period to allow the licensee’s
genuine reason to be checked.
8. Each license applicant has to comply with safe storage requirements by keeping firearms and
ammunition in separate fixed, locked receptacles, must submit to the inspection of storage by
authorities and is subject to immediate withdrawal of the license and confiscation of firearms
for failure to comply.
9. Firearm sales could be conducted only by or through licensed fire- arms dealers, thus ending
private and mail order gun sales. Detailed records of all sales would have to be provided to
police.
167
Id., 227.
Leone
47
10. The sale of ammunition would be allowed only for firearms for which the purchaser is
licensed, and limits would be placed on the quantity of ammunition that may be purchased in
a given period.
11. A firearm license may also be refused or cancelled following a conviction involving violence;
an apprehended violence, domestic violence or restraining order; reliable evidence of mental
or physical unsuitability to possess a firearm; and for not notifying a change of address.168,169
Despite the achievement of reaching an agreement on national firearm regulations,
the process of getting to this end result was not without opposition from the pro-gun
lobby in Australia. Due to extensive media coverage painting the gun lobby in a harshly
negative light, Australians were constantly met with stories of belligerent gun-crazed men
that only wanted to cling to their military-style and rapid-fire weaponry. While this
framing of the gun lobby ignored the sentimental tradition of hunting in the rural farm
towns of Australia, it did illustrate gun ownership and hunting as an angry and potentially
dangerous side of Australian life.170 Responding to these insults, the gun lobby, similar to
the NRA’s strategy in the United States, repeatedly made clear that it was not responsible
for the events of Port Arthur and that its members were “decent, law-abiding citizens who
had and would not harm anyone.”171 Nonetheless, whereas these arguments have
managed to put off legislative change to firearm laws in the United States, they carried no
weight in Australia following Port Arthur, and the potency of the general public in
criticizing and responding to claims from the gun lobby maintained the nation’s outrage
over what happened and challenged any possibility of inadequate reform.172
With the massive support of public opinion, PM John Howard did not have to worry
much about the political strength of the gun lobby. Before the finalization of the National
National Firearms Agreement, Australasian Police Ministers’ Council Special Firearms Meeting
(Canberra, May 10, 1996).
169
Chapman, Over Our Dead Bodies, 16-18.
170
Id., 18.
171
Id., 19.
172
Id., 25.
168
Leone
48
Firearms Agreement, between 83 to 90 percent of the public supported a ban on
automatic and semi-automatic weapons, and five weeks later on June 11 another poll
found that 80 per cent of respondents approved of PM Howard’s decision to severely
restrict the use of automatic and semi-automatic weapons.173 The most challenging issue
for PM John Howard in enacting uniform national gun regulations was slicing through
the partisanship of the different states. Just like the United States’ present system of
varying firearm regulations depending on the state, Australia’s gun laws were
inconsistent across each state before Port Arthur; this lack of consistency meant
Australia’s system of gun control was “only as strong as its weakest link,” which in this
case was Tasmania and Queensland.174 Luckily for Prime Minister Howard, he had the
advantage of dealing with the disaster as a newly-elected Prime Minister with a massive
majority in the new Parliament.175 Support of Howard’s proposal spread across party
lines, for John Howard received immediate backing from the Opposition, which was the
Australian Labor Party at the time, the Greens, and the Australian Democrats.176 The real
dilemma for Howard was acquiring the loyalty of Australia’s National Party, the most
socially and politically conservative party in Australia that had a long record of opposing
gun law reform.177 In corralling the base of National voters to support reform, PM
Howard turned to the National Party’s Federal leader, Deputy Prime Minister Tim
Fischer, who wholesomely supported Howard’s position at the cost of losing his own
Howard, “Political Review: March 1996-September 1996,” 119.
Chapman, Over Our Dead Bodies, 45.
175
Howard, “Political Review: March 1996-September 1996,” 119.
176
Chapman, Over Our Dead Bodies, 50,
177
Id., 69.
173
174
Leone
49
support within the National Party.178 With this broad base of approval, gun control was a
mainstream political priority.179
The final remaining challenge to Howard’s inevitable passing of the National
Firearms Act was the state and territory governments that had the ultimate say in firearm
regulations. After the Police Ministers’ meeting on May 10, 1996, Queensland, South
Australia, Western Australia, and the Northern Territory began prolonged debates and
lobbying that tried to lessen and ease many of the resolutions, definitions, and
provisions.180,181 To deal with these belligerent states and territories and to prevent the
entire resolution from failing, Prime Minister John Howard threatened to hold a national
referendum if all parties failed to introduce the agreed-upon laws by July 22.182 The
referendum was going to seek to alter the Australian Constitution so that the power to
make gun laws would originate from the Commonwealth Government, yet despite
opinion polls indicating that majority support for the power transfer would be reached,
the referendum would have also cost the government $50 million and run counter to PM
Howard’s wish to reach uniformity through “cooperative federalism.”183,184 Before the
deadline was reached, all states and territories had passed laws in line with the National
Firearms Agreement effectively changing the gun culture in Australia forever.
Drawing this section back to the thesis’ central notion of culture, it’s evident that the
prolonged process of achieving uniform national gun regulations in Australia did not
178
Id.
Id., 51.
180
Id., 56.
181
Particularly, these states and territory wanted to allow the ‘crimping’ of entire categories of firearms
listed for banning. Id.
182
Id.
183
Id.
184
Howard, “Political Review: March 1996-September 1996,” 120.
179
Leone
50
come easily. It was a combination of John Howard’s timeliness, rhetoric, and broad
support in the federal government that allowed him to swiftly push for change that would
have been impossible before the events of Port Arthur. Alongside the passionate pleas of
public opinion for stricter firearm regulations of automatic and semi-automatic weapons,
John Howard was able to reshape Australia’s culture into one where guns were not
viewed as a central aspect of what it means to be Australian. Resultantly, since this
culture shift, Australian has seen a drastic reduction in the amount of violence committed
with firearms.
C. The Current State of Gun Legislation and Violence in Australia
A central feature of the National Firearms Agreement was its decision to buyback a
substantial portion of the stockpile of firearms. To ensure its effectiveness, an expert
committee generated a price list that was used by all states to prevent citizens from
choosing the highest paying state.185 Australia’s buyback program began in 1996 and was
completed by September 30, 1997; during this period, citizens handed in a total of
643,726 prohibited firearms and received the market value for their weapon.186 The total
public expenditures of the program were roughly $A320 million ($U.S. 230 million),
which amounted to about $A500 ($U.S. 359) per gun.187 Comparing Australia’s buyback
program with Clinton’s 1994 Assault Weapons Ban, President Bill Clinton only set aside
$15 million for the Department of Housing and Urban Development to buy guns from
public housing residents.188 Here, the issue for the United States was the underfunding of
Reuter, and Mouzos, “Australia: A Massive Buy Back of Low-Risk Guns,” 130.
Id.
187
Exchange rates were as of September 25, 1997. Id.
188
Id., 123.
185
186
Leone
51
gun buyback programs. Without proper funding, a buyback scheme in the United States
would only capture an incredible meager percentage of the total number of firearms in
circulation.189 Thus, Australia managed to finance their program with an additional 0.2
per cent levy on national health insurance.190 With the cost of the buyback program
distributed equitably across society, it cost the average taxpayer $15.191
Following the initial buyback, a series of “rolling amnesties” periods were laid out
where gun owners could hand over guns that were either prohibited or not registered
without facing any penalty.192 As represented in Table 3 below, this subsequent wave of
amnesties brought the total number of firearms collected from the National Firearms
Agreement to 659,940 by August 2001:
Table 3: Gun Buyback, Totals and Expenditures, by Jurisdiction, August 2001193
189
Id., 124.
Id., 130.
191
Alpers and Ghazarian, “The ‘perfect storm’ of gun control,” 209.
192
Reuter, and Mouzos, “Australia: A Massive Buy Back of Low-Risk Guns,” 131.
193
Id., 132.
190
Leone
52
In combating gun violence, however, Australia’s firearm regulations did not stop
there. Identifying holes in its firearm regulations, in July 2002, the APMC agreed on the
National Firearm Trafficking Policy Agreement.194 The Trafficking Agreement sought to
increase border protection, introduce a nationally consistent regulation of the legal
manufacture of firearms, and establish new offences for illegally possessing or supplying
firearms as well as defacing a gun’s serial number.195 As a country with no shared land
borders, this policy effectively took advantage of Australia’s isolation to regulate and
control the flow of firearms in Australia.196 Later that same year on October 21, a
shooting incident occurred at Monash University in Melbourne, where a man entered a
classroom and shot and killed two people while wounding five.197 Since the National
Firearms Agreement had only covered long-guns, the gunman was legally a licensed
pistol owner with several handguns, including semi-automatic pistols and a .357 magnum
revolver.198 The following day, Prime Minister John Howard once again responded to the
tragedy and foreshadowed the raising of a new proposal to further strengthen gun laws in
Australia.199 PM Howard’s stated objective in discussing the issue at the
intergovernmental level was to see “whether there are additional things we can do to take
more weapons out of society consistent with protecting the right of sporting shooters in a
legitimate sense…”200
“Legislative Reforms,” Australian Institute of Criminology, November 3, 2017,
https://aic.gov.au/publications/rpp/rpp116/legislative-reforms.
195
Id.
196
Reuter, and Mouzos, “Australia: A Massive Buy Back of Low-Risk Guns,” 125.
197
Brendan Bailey, “Bills Digest No. 155 2002-03: National Handgun Buyback Bill 2003,” Parliament of
Australia, May 22, 2003,
https://www.aph.gov.au/Parliamentary_Business/Bills_Legislation/bd/bd0203/03bd155.
198
Id.
199
Id.
200
Question without Notice, 'Law Enforcement: Gun Control', Debates, House of Representatives, 22
October 2002: p. 8229.
194
Leone
53
By December 2002, the Australian state and territory governments and the
national government had reached a consensus on the National Handgun Control
Agreement.201 The NHCA prohibits handguns that have:
“[1] a caliber that is greater than .38, unless the handgun is used to participate in a specially
accredited sporting event in that case a caliber of up to .45 will be permitted, [2] a barrel
length of less than 120 mm for semi-automatic handguns and less than 100 mm for revolvers
and single-shot handguns, unless the handgun is a highly specialized target pistol, and [3]
a magazine/shot capacity that exceeds 10 rounds.”202
Using the $15 million left over from the 1996 buyback along with an indicative cost of
$69 million to the Commonwealth, the states and territories conducted a period of
handgun buybacks from July 1, 2003, until December 31, 2003.203 When the buyback
period had ended, the Australian Commonwealth had collected and destroyed 68,727
handguns, making the overall recorded total of firearms collected since the 1996 buyback
728,667.204 Realistically, Philip Alpers, who has dedicated his research to Australia’s gun
policies, has found that this number is not only conservative but also ignorant of the
firearms that were untallied and unrecognized.205 Alpers affirms that at least 219,721
additional firearms were given up for destruction as, “Such was the swing in public
opinion that large numbers of gun owners sent lawfully held firearms to the smelter, even
when there was no obligation to do so.”206 In the end, as a result of these buyback
“Firearms-Control Legislation and Policy: Australia,” Library of Congress, July 30, 2015,
https://www.loc.gov/law/help/firearms-control/australia.php.
202
Id.
203
Brendan Bailey, “Bills Digest No. 155 2002-03: National Handgun Buyback Bill 2003.”
204
Alpers and Ghazarian, “The ‘perfect storm’ of gun control,” 209.
205
Philip Alpers, “The Big Melt: How One Democracy Changed After Scrapping a Third of its Firearms,”
in Reducing Gun Violence in America: Informing Policy with Evidence and Analysis, eds. Daniel W.
Webster and Jon S. Vernick (Baltimore: John Hopkins University Press, 2013).
206
Id.
201
Leone
54
periods, at least one million privately owned firearms, constituting a third of the
estimated national stockpile,207 were given up or seized before being melted down.208
This thesis has gone to great lengths to display the magnitude of guns the
Australian Government managed to remove from its country’s total stock. In doing so,
the central question is whether or not Australia’s buyback programs and restrictive gun
laws produced any positive effect. Writing before the conclusion of the handgun buyback
programs, Peter Reuter and Jenny Mouzos were openly critical of the effectiveness of
Australia’s more restrictive laws and mass purchasing of civilian firearms. They held that
the total homicide rates had already been declining throughout the 1990s, and the
National Firearms Agreement did not accelerate this decline in any way.209 Their
statistics showed that there was a “decline of 8.9 percent in the rate of total homicide and
a 3.2 percent decline in the daily rate of firearm homicide,” but these declines simply
“continued a long-term trend.”210 Evidently however, Reuter and Mouzos did concede
that in the five years between Port Arthur and their study there had been zero firearm
mass murder incidents in Australia, and the average number of victims to firearm
violence was smaller than previous mass murders.211 With regard to homicides
committed with a firearm, the number declined between 1980 and 1995 before falling
sharply from 1996 to 1999.212 Nonetheless, Reuter and Mouzos conclude that “the results
[of the National Firearms Agreement] provide little insight [into the effectiveness of gun
207
As of 2016, the estimated total number of licit and illicit drugs owned by civilians in Australia is 3.15
million. “Australia – Gun Facts, Figures and the Law,” GunPolicy.org,
208
Alpers and Ghazarian, “The ‘perfect storm’ of gun control,” 209.
209
Reuter, and Mouzos, “Australia: A Massive Buy Back of Low-Risk Guns,” 134.
210
Id.
211
Id., 135.
212
Id.
Leone
55
buyback proposals].”213 Comparing Australia’s buyback program with the U.S. 1994
Assault Weapons Ban, the authors state that, like the United States’ ban, the National
Firearms Agreement targeted a certain type of gun that was only highly publicized
because of its use in a few instances of mass murder.214
Writing barely seven years after the Port Arthur Massacre, Reuter and Mouzos are
incredibly skeptical of the impacts the NAF had in alleviating gun violence, yet they do
concede that firearm homicides and mass murders have declined along with the overall
rate of crime. In scrutinizing these claims that Australia’s stringent gun laws did not
affect rates of firearm violence, Philip Alpers has conducted a more prolonged and
extensive study of the effects of Australia’s firearm regulations. He found:
“In the 15 years preceding gun law reform, Australia saw 14 mass shootings in which a total
of 117 people died. In the 20 years that followed, no mass public shootings occurred.215 In the
same two decades after gun law reform, the rate of fatal shootings that claimed fewer than
five victims—that is, the majority of gun deaths—also showed a downward trend.”216
As reproduced below in Figure 3, Alpers shows that, while the rate of fatal shootings had
been declining before the new firearm legislation in Australia, following the Port Arthur
Massacre the risk of dying from firearm violence in Australia fell by more than half.217
Looking twenty years later at the statistics for 2016, it’s evident that the rate of all gun
deaths in Australia “shows no sign of increasing and… remains 25 times lower than that
of the United States.”218 Furthermore, after the buyback, firearm suicide rates dropped
almost 80% while non-firearm death rates remained the same.219 All in all, the states
213
Id., 141.
Id.
215
Occurring after Alpers’ research, Australia has only suffered one mass shooting following Port Arthur.
It happened on June 4, 2019, when a man shot and killed four people in Darwin.
216
Alpers and Ghazarian, “The ‘perfect storm’ of gun control,” 209-210.
217
Id., 210.
218
Id.
219
Alpers, “The Big Melt: How One Democracy Changed After Scrapping a Third of its Firearms.”
214
Leone
56
where more firearms were bought back saw the largest declines in firearm deaths.220 It’s
necessary for this thesis to harp on the declining statistics of firearm violence in
Australia, for the events of Port Arthur and the subsequent buyback programs spurred
progressive political action about regulating firearms in Australia. While the United
States has not shown any real initiative to follow this same path, the lessons of
Australia’s buyback programs still boast powerful results in diminishing gun violence.
Figure 3: Rate of all gun deaths in Australia, 1987-2016221
In closing, the events of Port Arthur effectively changed Australia’s attitude
towards firearms forever. Faced with national disaster as a newly elected Prime Minister,
John Howard was capable of capitalizing on his incumbent status and unifying all
220
221
Id.
Alpers and Ghazarian, “The ‘perfect storm’ of gun control,” 210.
Leone
57
political parties in a timely and powerful manner. Port Arthur was “the last straw.”222 It
was clear that Australia’s firearm laws had to change, and when they did, Australians
became safer. Now, Australia’s gun reforms stand as a model for other nations. Since the
2019 Christchurch Mosque Shootings, New Zealand has pursued a similar model of gun
control as Australia and conducted a buyback program.223 For future research, it will be
interesting to examine the success and potency of New Zealand’s buyback compared to
that of Australia.
222
Id., 208.
“New Zealand Introduces New Gun Control Bills Six Months After Christchurch Massacre,” Public
Radio International (PRI), September 13, 2019,
https://search.proquest.com/docview/2289946704?accountid=11456.
223
Leone
58
Chapter III: The Culture Question
Introduction
Now that this thesis has adequately laid out the respective histories of firearm
legislation and violence in the United States and Australia, Chapter III moves to consider
the culture question. In this sense, it teases out similarities and differences in both the
United States’ and Australia’s cultures regarding firearms. Chapter III starts with an indepth analysis of Australia’s structure of government and written constitution. To
understand how Australia’s relationship with firearms was shaped from colonial times,
this chapter draws attention to the Australian Constitution’s vast powers that are granted
to the Queen of England as Australia’s Head of State. Comparing Australia’s relationship
to Britain alongside that of the United States, Chapter III proceeds to examine Australia’s
colonial history as a British penal society and its relationship to the British Empire. Here,
this thesis highlights how Australia’s prolonged dependence on Great Britain did not
create a culture dependent on self-defense. It concludes its look at Australian culture by
describing the birth of Australian nationalism following WWII. Following this look into
Australian culture, Chapter III then shifts to the United States’ culture. It acknowledges
the differences in colonial history between the United States and Australia before
scrutinizing the role of the NRA in shaping gun culture in America. In all, as both the
U.S. and Australia were founded as British colonies, it is interesting how each nation’s
culture varied with regard to firearms. While the American colonists had brought guns
from Europe to defend themselves, the Australian colonists were prisoners that were not
typically allowed to have weapons. This difference in colonization bled through the
subsequent history of each nation and molded the culture that exists today.
Leone
59
A. Analysis of Australia’s Structure of Government
In briefly touching upon the differences between the two countries’ government
structures, the United States operates as both a representative democracy and a republic,
where U.S. citizens vote for representatives that they believe will best embody their ideas
and desires in government.224 Australia, on the other hand, is both a representative
democracy and a constitutional monarchy with Queen Elizabeth II as Australia’s Head of
State.225 Despite Queen Elizabeth II’s role as head of state in Australia, this title is merely
formal and symbolic.226 In reality, the head of government, the Prime Minister, in
Australia has the administrative power to govern the country.227 The Governor-General,
who is selected by the Prime Minister, has the powers of the Queen delegated to him or
her by the Australian Constitution and serves to advise the Prime Minister.228 Altogether,
even though the Queen has a role in Australia’s government and has powers delegated to
her through the Australian Constitution, she has never made use of her power to disallow
an Australian Act of Parliament, and her status as Queen of Australia is unrelated to the
United Kingdom Government.229 In light of this thesis, it is important to spell out the
nature that the Queen of England has in relation to Australia’s system of government, for
the United States grew out of a more hostile relationship with the UK during colonial
times. With regard to the question of culture, the formal, written structure of the
Eugene Volokh, “Is the United States of America a republic or democracy,” The Washington Post, May
13, 2015, https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/volokh-conspiracy/wp/2015/05/13/is-the-united-statesof-america-a-republic-or-a-democracy/.
225
Australian Government, “How Government Works,” Australia.gov.au,
https://www.australia.gov.au/about-government/how-government-works.
226
Parliament of Australia, “Infosheet 20 – The Australian system of government,”
https://www.aph.gov.au/About_Parliament/House_of_Representatives/Powers_practice_and_procedure/00
_-_Infosheets/Infosheet_20_-_The_Australian_system_of_government.
227
Id.
228
Id.
229
Id.
224
Leone
60
Australian Constitution acts as a starting point to analyze some possible cultural
differences between the United States, Australia, and New Zealand that led to such
differing cultures towards firearms.
Similar to the United States, Australia’s government is divided into three
branches: a legislature, an executive, and a judiciary. Yet, compared to the United States’
fairly brief Constitution which set up an autonomous, independent American nation, the
text of the Australian Constitution of July 9, 1990, does not separate an independent
Australia from the Queen of England’s rule. In fact, constitutionally, the Queen retains
certain powers in both the Australian Parliament and the Executive Government.
According to the first section of Chapter I of the Australian Constitution, which lays out
the duties of Parliament, “The legislative power of the Commonwealth shall be vested in
a Federal Parliament, which shall consist of the Queen, a Senate, and a House of
Representatives.”230 On top of this, the next section further elaborates on the powers of
the Queen in the Australian government by portraying:
“A Governor-General appointed by the Queen shall be Her Majesty’s representative in the
Commonwealth, and shall have and may exercise in the Commonwealth during the Queen’s
pleasure, but subject to this Constitution, such powers and functions of the Queen as Her Majesty
may be pleased to assign to him.”231
For the Executive branch, the Australian Constitution lays out in Chapter II section 61
that, “The executive power of the Commonwealth is vested in the Queen and is
exercisable by the Governor-General,” for the execution and maintenance of both the
Constitution and the laws of the Commonwealth.232 Among other things, constitutionally,
230
AUS Const. Ch. I, part I, §1.
AUS Const. Ch. I, part I, §2.
232
AUS Const. Ch. II, §61.
231
Leone
61
the Governor-General is given the power to appoint Ministers of State233 and command
the naval and military forces of the Commonwealth.234
While a textualist reading of the Australian Constitution would lead one to believe
that the Queen of England held tremendous power over the Australian political system,
reading the Australian Constitution literally is misleading. The Prime Minister and
Cabinet possess the powers of the executive branch; their power is derived
constitutionally from their membership in the Federal Executive Council, politically from
the people electing the House of Representatives, and conventionally from the tradition
of the Westminster system of government.235 In fleshing out the Australian system of
government’s relationship to the central crux of this thesis, firearm culture, it’s necessary,
as a starting point, to look to their written constitution in order to start teasing out the
differences of culture and politics between the United States, Australia, and New Zealand
that led to such divergent views on firearms. Particularly, Australia’s intimate
relationship with and reliance on the United Kingdom from Australia’s founding as a
penal society up through World War II had immense impacts on the development of
Australian culture. Whereas the United States emerged from its revolutionary roots free
from the shackles of British rule and passionate to violently defend their independence
from the threat of tyranny,236 Australian nationalism is complicated and grew out of a
dependence on the UK to provide protections and cultural hegemonic practices.237
233
AUS Const. Ch. II §64.
AUS Const. Ch. II §68.
235
Parliament of Australia, “Infosheet 20 – The Australian system of government.”
236
Whitney, Living with Guns, 71.
237
Neville Meaney, “Britishness and Australian identity: The problem of nationalism in Australian history
and historiography,” Australian Historical Studies 32, no. 116 (2001): 77-78.
234
Leone
62
B. History of Australia’s Colonization
Unlike the United States of America, where colonists left Britain to escape
religious persecution, Australia was the creation of a British imperial decision.238
Following the Industrial Revolution in the 18th century, a generation of urban poor were
left to fend for themselves without work or money in the overcrowded cities of Britain.239
These extreme conditions of poverty drove individuals to steal in order to survive.240
Thus, as crime rates soared during this time period, the number of people incarcerated
exceeded the capacity of British prisons, so thousands of criminals were diverted to
British hulk ships for imprisonment in the harbors.241 Soon enough, the hulks were also
filled to their maximum capacity, and Britain decided to ship these prisoners off to distant
lands.242 While serious crimes, such as murder or rape, were punishable by death, petty
crime offenders were forcibly moved to some unknown corner of the globe.243,244 At first,
the British sent their prisoners to the United States, but when the American Revolution
came to a close in 1782, Britain had to look to another land mass to alleviate the
overcrowding of correctional facilities: Australia.
Following Captain James Cook’s voyage to the east coast of New Holland in
1770, the British decided that an eight-month boat trip to Australia would be the perfect
location to seclude these criminals, even though Australia had been already been
Gregory Melleuish, “No longer tied to Britain, Australia is still searching for its place in the world,” The
Conversation, January 26, 2017, https://theconversation.com/no-longer-tied-to-britain-australia-is-stillsearching-for-its-place-in-the-world-70407.
239
Tom Smith, “Why Great Britain Sent its Prisoners to Australia,” Culture Trip, August 13, 2018,
https://theculturetrip.com/pacific/australia/articles/why-great-britain-sent-its-prisoners-to-australia/.
240
Id.
241
Id.
242
Id.
243
Id.
244
In this era, petty criminal sentences largely resulted from stealing anything worth more than one shilling,
which was the average day’s wage. Id.
238
Leone
63
inhabited for 65,000+ years by the Indigenous people.245 On January 26, 1788, at the
arrival of the First Fleet, Admiral Arthur Phillip founded the penal colony of New South
Wales.246 The colonization party consisted of a 1,500 mix of military personnel, civilians,
and convicts, and immediately upon founding the colony of New South Wales the
convicts were given work according to their skills that was necessary to colonize the
Australian continent.247 Early on, the conditions in the penal society was grim; food was
scarce and farmers had trouble making the most of the harsh Australian conditions.248
Additionally, all newly-emancipated convicts in Australia suffered from the heavy social
stigma for their prior petty crimes as British-oriented colonies emerged in Australia.249
The transportation of British convicts to Australian colonies continued from 1788 up until
1868; there were more than 160,000 convicts with 80% being male and 20% being
female.250
In sum, relating this history back to the nature of firearm legislation and culture,
it’s important to provide this base of colonial history in order to better grasp the cultural
differences between the United States, Australia, and New Zealand. While the United
States violently rebelled and gained their independence from Britain, Australia remained
closely tied to Britain throughout the colonization of the Australian continent. As a
society of excommunicated convicts, colonial Australians did not enjoy the same degree
of freedoms and rights that colonial Americans did. Therefore, these colonial Australians
were shackled to the rule of British law for their petty offences and forced to colonize the
245
Id.
Id.
247
Id.
248
Id.
249
Id.
250
Id.
246
Leone
64
Australian continent without any means to defend themselves. In the colonial United
States, colonists brought guns to hunt and to defend themselves from any threat.251
Colonial Americans viewed this right to own a gun as common law; while the right could
be subject to restrictions, it could not be entirely withheld from the American people, and
they enshrined the Second Amendment with this common law to protect Americans from
the tyranny of federal government similar to that which they suffered under British
rule.252
Early Australian convicts, on the other hand, did not recognize a common law
nature of firearms in their society. Similar to the violence and bloodshed that ensued
between Native Americans and the American colonists, Australian colonists fought a
long and brutal series of frontier wars against the Aboriginal peoples. Nevertheless,
Australian convicts were not entitled to bring guns with them to the Australian continent
to defend themselves; instead, these convicts were chained together and subjected to
heinous conditions and punishments while at sea.253 As a result, during the frontier wars,
these Australian convict settlers lacked organization and weapons.254 Although the
settlers of the Port Phillip District pleaded for organization and training in 1838,
Australian civilians were never given proper military organization and training to fight on
the frontier.255 Civilian gun ownership during this early period was not as common as it
would later become, and colonial governors were increasingly hesitant to confer arms to
251
Whitney, Living with Guns, 38.
Id., 45,71.
253
Robert Hughes, The Fatal Shore: The epic of Australia’s founding (New York: Vintage Books, 1988)
145-146.
254
John Connor, The Australian Frontier Wars, 1788-1838 (Sydney: University of New South Wales Press,
2002), 14.
255
Id.
252
Leone
65
the general populous.256 All in all, British-Australian officials during this colonial time
period did not entrust guns in the hands of the common man, for violence on the
Australian frontier was controlled by the professionally trained British soldiers. In relying
upon the British army for protection, Australia’s colonial history splits drastically from
that of the United States. As the American colonists clung to their guns to oppose British
tyranny, the Australian convicts were incapable of possessing the training or firepower to
defend themselves alone. This dependence on British protection infused aspects of British
culture into the Australian people, so “Australianness was embedded in their Britishness;
the two were not in conflict.”257
C. What is Australian (firearm) nationalism?
As touched upon earlier in this chapter, the Australian Constitution was signed
into effect on July 9, 1900, yet despite being its own sovereign entity, Australia chose to
cling to and rely on Britain’s support and culture until the 1970s before pursuing a path of
their own.258 Consequently, because of this jumbled nature of Australian dependence on
Britain, it has been confusing for scholars to actually pinpoint a moment where Australia
truly became its own nation with its individual sense of nationalism.259 Neville Meaney
fashions a concise definition of Australian nationalism in claiming:
“In employing nationalism as an analytical term, what has to be examined is the idea that
Australians… had of themselves as ‘a people’… The nature of the democratic idea which gives
national character to a people, especially in a democratic political culture like Australia’s, is revealed
most authoritatively in the rhetoric of leaders of representative institutions, in the content of history
and literature curricula, in oaths of loyalty and public rituals and in the popular enthusiasm for
symbols, anthems and ceremonial days.”260
256
Id., 15.
Melleuish, “No longer tied to Britain.”
258
Meaney, “Britishness and Australian identity,” 76.
259
Id.
260
Id., 78-79.
257
Leone
66
Australia was the “Reluctant Nation;” while fully capable of prospering as a fully
independent nation, Australia was unwilling “to cut ties with Britain, affirm their own
separate identity and embrace… ‘a possible independent destiny.’”261 The historical
pervasiveness of British culture and ideals throughout Australia illustrates how
Australians’ conception of themselves as British people conditioned them to integrate
copious amounts of British culture into their daily life that had a direct effect on the
growth of their Australian culture.
To provide examples illustrating Australians’ conception that they themselves
were culturally British not Australian, first, the oaths of loyalty in public schools
throughout the early 1900s were British.262 Also, the history curriculum both in schools
and in universities taught Australian history “as a footnote to the grand story of the
British peoples’ great Empire which covered a sixth of the globe.”263,264 Moreover,
Britain’s Empire Day, which Australia introduced a decade before Britain did, was
celebrated as a sacred occasion, whereas Australia Day retained no national spirit and
was only celebrated as a secular picnic.265 Therefore, in defining nationalism, Neville
Meaney clarifies, “If ideas of nationalism are not expressions of the essence of a people’s
being but historically conditioned imaginings… in the nationalist era Britishness was the
dominant cultural myth in Australia, the dominant social idea giving meaning to ‘the
people.’”266 From its colonization, Australia retained exceptionally close ties with the
261
Id., 78.
For example, “I love my country the British Empire, I salute her flag the Union Jack.” Id.
263
Id.
264
Teaching Australian history as a footnote to British history also served to intensify the divide between
Aboriginal peoples and the white, European settlers as these issues of the frontier wars was effectively
suppressed until very recently.
265
Meaney, “Britishness and Australian identity,” 79.
266
Id.
262
Leone
67
British Empire that began with the First Fleet in 1788 and continued throughout the
1950s. This overtly submissive and cordial relationship with the British led Australians to
extensively rely on the British for trade and military protection as Australians were
unwilling to decipher their own form of Australian nationalism.
It was not until the Fall of Singapore in February 1942 when Australia finally
began to diminish its reliance on protection from Britain.267 In this sense, the threat and
fear of communism spreading from Japan into Australia in World War II and the inability
of the British to counter this threat serve as the catalysts which increased Australian
reliance on a new global superpower: the United States.268 The resulting ANZUS
Alliance of 1951 strengthened Australian borders and security, for “Australia's active
support of US deterrence affords us [Australians] protection under Washington's
extended nuclear umbrella, and provides us access to cutting-edge technology, advanced
defense capabilities and exquisite intelligence products that we wouldn't otherwise
get.”269 This access to the US’ military technology and protection is expressed through
the presence of “joint facilities” on the Australian continent, most notably the Joint
Defense Facility Pine Gap in Central Australia, the Harold E. Holt Naval Communication
Station at North West Cape in Western Australia, and the Australian Defense Satellite
Communications Station at Kojarena. As Richard Tanter describes, these joint facilities
operate and are critical for:
267
At the Fall of Singapore, Japanese forces managed to use their speed to overwhelm British, Australian,
and Indian forces killing more than 138,000 soldiers of which roughly 130,000 died while prisoners of war.
“The Fall of Singapore,” Commonwealth War Graves Commission, https://www.cwgc.org/history-andarchives/second-world-war/campaigns/war-in-the-east/singapore.
268
Alan Patience, “To Be or Not to Be in Asia?” in Australian Foreign Policy in Asia: Middle Power or
Awkward Partner? (London: Palgrave MacMillan, 2017) 98.
269
Ashley Townshend and Brendan Thomas-Noone, “There's a Part of the US-Australia Alliance We
Rarely Talk about — Nuclear Weapons,” ABC News, February 27, 2019, www.abc.net.au/news/2019-0227/us-australia-nuclear-alliance-in-the-indo-pacific/10849350.
Leone
68
“…US nuclear-war targeting, US-Japanese missile defense, US drone and special forces extrajudicial counter-terrorism killings, the rapidly growing US capacity for space warfare, and direct
support for ground and air operations in the wars in Afghanistan, Iraq, Syria, and for US combat
operations in any outbreak of armed conflict on the Korean Peninsula.”270
Yet, security and military benefits of the ANZUS Alliance aside, Australia’s
interrelationship with British culture was not ousted for American ideals during this
change in focus of Australian security. In fact, following the ‘Great Betrayal’ at
Singapore, 65 per cent of Australians polled in a public opinion survey opted to be British
when asked whether they wished to have British or Australian nationality.271 Hence, an
individual’s sense of Australian Britishness was not the result of imperial cultural
hegemony and colonial dependence on British protection.272 Instead, during the
colonization of Australia, the first Australian settlers had a “fragile hold on a vast land set
in an Asian sea,” so the colonists were increasingly “receptive to the atavistic idea of
[British] community.”273 Relying on Britain for support, the Australian colonies were
proud members of the British Empire making it easier for them to come to terms with
their “racial and cultural heritage as the basis for their idea of nationalism.”274 As
conceptions of Australianness advanced, these British qualities became intertwined with
uniquely Australian characteristics of mateship and suspicion of authority.275,276
Following World War II, Australia’s dream of the unity of the British peoples came to an
end:
“It was events outside Australia's control, the transformation of the British Commonwealth and
Britain's decision to find its future in Europe, which forced Australians finally to see that their British
Richard Tanter, “Tightly Bound: The United States and Australia’s Alliance-Dependent Militarization,”
The Asia Pacific Journal 16, no. 2 (June 1, 2018), https://apjjf.org/2018/11/Tanter.html.
271
Meaney, “Britishness and Australian identity,” 80.
272
Id., 84.
273
Id., 81.
274
Id., 82.
275
Id., 83.
276
For a more detailed narrative about these Australian values, See Russel Ward’s The Australian Legend.
270
Leone
69
dream was an illusion, to acknowledge that Britain was a 'foreign country' and to try to find their own
place in the world.”277
Connecting this lengthy narrative of Australia’s British sense of nationalism back to this
thesis’ overarching focus on firearm culture, Britain’s role in influencing and shaping
Australia’s idea of nationalism can be tied into Australian’s conception of firearms. In
receiving beneficial protective services from the British Empire during the colonial
period, Australians were historically more disengaged from the self-defense nature of
firearms and a right to bear arms than the American colonists were. The Australian
colonists had no desire of rebelling against the British Empire.278 Their only perceived
threat was the Aboriginal population, but the Aborigines did not possess or use firearms
on the frontier preferring to use traditional weaponry like spears.279 With the help of
British firepower, violence against the Aboriginals was incredibly one-sided resulting in
66,680 Aboriginal casualties between the 1820s and early 1900s.280 Rather than
celebrating and memorializing this history of self-defense like Americans have done for
the American Revolution, Australians ignored their widespread massacre of Aboriginals
in the frontier wars in what has been termed by anthropologist WEH Stanner as the “great
Australian silence.”281 Hence, the Australian colonial history lacked the need to take up
arms to defend oneself from the tyranny of the British government. Australian
nationalism blossomed from its British roots; in expanding these ideals, Australians
Meaney, “Britishness and Australian identity,” 89.
Id., 82.
279
Connor, The Australian Frontier Wars, 1788-1838, 15.
280
Paul Daley, “Our Most Important War: The legacy of frontier conflict,” in The Honest History Book,
eds. David Stephens and Alison Broinowski (Sydney: NewSouth), 246.
277
278
281
This refers to the failure of Australian history books in substantively addressing the Australian
Indigenous history. Id., 247.
Leone
70
continue to bring forth new civic ideas that enhance Australian nationalism and
acknowledge the growing diversity of peoples.
Now, every January 26, Australians annually celebrate their growing sense of
nationalism on Australia Day. While it began as a celebration of the emancipated,
English convicts’ settlement of the Australian continent, Australia Day has recently
evolved into a “celebration of Australia that reflects the nation’s diverse people.”282 This
shift in Australian identity has come as Australia continues to work out its place both
regionally and globally. Australia “knows it cannot be another US… It knows that the
ties with Britain will only get weaker over time;”283 therefore, in figuring out where they
belong, Australians have altered their British-centric focus of Australian culture to
celebrate a more-encompassing view of what it means to be an Australian. In effect, this
has meant moving Australia Day’s purpose away from the imperial creation of a British
Australia and towards a celebration of the growing Australian culture.284 Most
importantly, this change now includes the recognition and commemoration of the
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples’ culture, which has existed in Australia for
more than 65,000 years but was subject to unrelenting violence and oppression from the
British settlers.285,286 All and all, Australia’s culture, as a result of its immediate ties with
British tradition and culture, has historically struggled to find and celebrate its own sense
of nationalism. Nevertheless, in reassessing the role of Britishness in Australian history,
282
National Australia Day Council, “About Australia Day,” Australia Day,
https://www.australiaday.org.au/about-australia-day/.
283
Melleuish, “No longer tied to Britain.”
284
Id.
285
National Australia Day Council, “About Australia Day.”
286
For an in-depth history of the Australian frontier wars, See Henry Reynolds’ Forgotten War.
Leone
71
Australia has begun to adapt to a period of social change and bring new ideas like multiracialism and multiculturalism into everyday Australian life.287
D. America’s Colonial Legacy of Firearm Culture
The histories of both the United States and Australia were each fraught with
large-scale violence against the native populations. In the United States, this bloodshed
stemmed from the initial colonization of the continental U.S., where the earliest
American colonists brought guns to hunt for food and defend themselves from the Native
Americans when they had to.288 While the assumption was that the English settlers could
get along peacefully with the natives, the colonists’ hopes were quickly proven incorrect,
and they had to rely on guns for self-defense.289 For example, in December 1620 when
the Mayflower arrived in present-day Provincetown, the initial settlers were met with
violent retaliation from Native Americans; after the Englishmen found and dug up buried
baskets of corn with no fear of repercussion for taking it, Native Americans attacked a
group of the intruders a few days later with bows and arrows at “First Encounter
Beach.”290 Because of their firearms, the English settlers were able to retaliate and scare
off the attackers.291 On top of this, the glorified first Thanksgiving in Plymouth of 1621
was not as friendly and naïve as it has been taught in American schools. While the initial
hostilities did subside with a peace treaty between the Wampanoag, English colonists,
and the Massasoit, the English settlers were still armed at the feast for hunting and, if
Meaney, “Britishness and Australian identity,” 89-90.
Whitney, Living with Guns, 38.
289
Id, 42.
290
Id, 43.
291
Id.
287
288
Leone
72
need be, self-defense.292 As a result of the violent tensions between Native Americans
and English settlers, the early history of the United States conditioned these men that
“having firearms was a matter of right – a right recognized in common law,” yet this
common law right was still subject to restrictions from the earliest colonial times.293,294
Thus, this culture of defending oneself with firearms against some existential
threat was ingrained in the American mindset from the outset. Following the French and
Indian War, Great Britain’s imposition of taxes and customs duties on the colonies to
support the cost of a standing army led to the colonist’s apathy towards Britain.295 With
Parliament’s levying of the Quartering Act and the Stamp Act, the colonists, who “still
had the right and the duty to bear those firearms they had,” decided to defend themselves
from the increased oppression they were being subjected to by those in power far away in
Great Britain.296 Without going into excruciating detail about the Revolutionary War, its
impact and implications on the culture of firearms in the United States is astounding and
is where this thesis finds a critical breaking point between the histories of the United
States and Australia. Early Americans relied substantially on their weapons for selfdefense against first the Native Americans and then the British Empire. Albeit the
colonial militia retained little discipline and training in tactics and structure of a wellregulated militia during the Revolutionary War, the Americans were still successful in
securing their freedom with the use of firearms, which created a legacy that shaped the
country the United States would become.297
292
Id, 43-44.
Id, 45.
294
For example, “Colonial regulations in Massachusetts, as elsewhere, required all free adult (white
Protestant) males in the community to own and be capable of using firearms for militia service.” Id, 46.
295
Id, 57.
296
Id.
297
Id, 66,69.
293
Leone
73
E. The Unstoppable NRA
It would be impossible for this thesis to mention gun culture in the United States
without expanding on the massive impact that the National Rifle Association has had in
influencing Americans. Following the Civil War, two Union veterans, William Conant
Church and George Wood Wingate, formed the NRA because they believed, “An
association should be organized… to promote and encourage rifle shooting on a scientific
basis.”298 On November 17, 1871, the National Rifle Association was granted a charter in
New York “to promote rifle practice… and to promote the introduction of a system of
aimed drill and target firing among… the militia of other states.”299 Presently, the NRA
stands as an $88 million-dollar-a-year corporate non-profit with about 2.6 million
members, 400 employees and assets of $128 million.300 Shifting its focus from promoting
recreational marksmanship, hunting, and safety training to stopping any attempts at gun
control, the NRA hardened its absolutist views in 1977 when Harlon Bronson Carter
seized leadership of the NRA in the Cincinnati Revolt.301 Since then, the NRA now
represents the largest impediment to possible attempts at gun control in the U.S.302 In
fueling its agenda with fear and intimidation, the NRA is unyielding in its stance against
gun controls.303 Since its founding, the NRA has clung to the ideal of the American
rifleman tradition rooted in the Revolutionary War.304 This image of the “citizen-soldier”
298
Sugarmann, National Rifle Association: Money-Firepower-Fear, 25.
Id., 26.
300
Id., 13.
301
At the annual NRA meeting in Cincinnati, Ohio, in 1977, the vocal minority of Second Amendment
fundamentalist in the NRA, led by Carter, reshaped the NRA’s idea of gun ownership from a recreational
issue into a political one. Id., 47-49.
302
Id., 17.
303
Id., 17-19.
304
Id., 13.
299
Leone
74
symbolizes the NRA’s ideals and appeals to a wide range of the American populace as
the NRA prides itself on defending these gun owners’ rights and freedoms.305
How then has the NRA successfully managed to draw this potent firearm culture
out of American citizens? Put simply, fear and intimidation are the NRA’s most effective
tools:
“In newspapers and magazine ads, Americans are warned of the need for an armed civilian
population as a check against the tyranny of a strong federal government. Other ads paint a
world in which unarmed victims are easy prey for criminals and the police are never there
when you need them. The only reliable form of self-defense, readers are assured, comes from
the barrel of a gun.”306
Further, the NRA proceeds to also translate this ideology into political action on Capitol
Hill. As Josh Sugarmann conveys, “Its political approach is not sophisticated: reward
your friends and punish your enemies.”307 While this strategy only fuels political
partisanship, it works for the NRA. By utilizing its lobbying arm, the Institute for
Legislative Action (ILA), the NRA delegates a substantial portion of its budget to the
ILA in order to battle federal and state gun control measures and motivate the
membership.308 This anti-gun-control message permeates through all of the NRA’s
programs, including publications, fundraising, public affairs, and member services.309
The degree to which the NRA makes its message heard on issues of gun control happens
on a mass scale. Whenever any measure of gun control is proposed in local, state, or
federal laws, NRA mailings are sent to all of its members showcasing said gun control
measure as “a personal attack threatening the very life of each NRA member and his
305
Id., 13-15.
Id., 19.
307
Id.
308
Id.
309
Id.
306
Leone
75
family.”310 Since its origins as a firearms training and sportsmanship association, the
NRA has radicalized its ideology. In doing so, the NRA has capitalized on its members’
fears of disarmament and violence and created a formidable base of Second Amendment
fundamentalist voters that view gun control as the only issue by which to judge a
candidate for office.311
The NRA has taken the United States’ colonial understanding of the right to bear
arms and made it into a “literal war” that will not end until the last inkling of proposed
gun control is defeated.312 Because the NRA reshaped firearm culture and infused it with
fear and intimidation, the National Rifle Association is constantly successful in battling
gun control. As a result, the “political ineptitude of gun control organizations, the apathy
of their supporters, politicians’ fear of NRA retaliation and many Americans’ misplaced
faith in firearms as effective self-defense tools” have given the NRA inordinate power to
frame the parameters of the gun debate however they desire.313 In the end, the NRA’s
capacity to frame gun debates means “that firearms… are rarely seen for what they are:
inherently dangerous consumer products.”314 For rates of firearm violence in the U.S. and
notions of gun culture, this attitude is toxic; the NRA’s emphasis on fear and intimidation
ignores the recurring problem of mass shootings and fails to deal with polarization by
instead attacking the opposition and refusing to respectfully dialogue.315 To reach some
sense of common ground, the United States’ political leaders must stop listening to
lobbyists who pander to fears.316 Whether these fears spawn from Second Amendment
310
Id.
Id., 165.
312
Id., 252.
313
Id., 251-252.
314
Id., 90.
315
Whitney, Living with Guns, 211.
316
Id., xi-xii.
311
Leone
76
fundamentalists or hardliner gun control advocates does not matter, what matters for the
preservation of both life and liberty of Americans is achieving realistic solutions to the
issues of gun violence at hand.
Leone
77
Chapter IV: Where does one go from here?
In tracing the histories of firearm legislation, violence, and culture in Australia
and the United States, this thesis has rooted out some explanations for differences
between the American and Australian gun cultures. At the crux of this difference is the
Second Amendment. During an interview with Craig Whitney,317 Whitney commented on
the reason why Australia could enact such sweeping gun reform, and he stated, “I
oversimplified it, but they [Australians] do not have a Second Amendment or the history
that led up to it. We do.”318 On the whole, it is this variance between U.S. and Australian
history that spurred the subsequent growth of two very distinct gun cultures. While many
younger Americans living in big cities or affluent suburbs are reliant on the law and
police powers to keep them safe, these individuals are far removed from the colonists
who had to depend on firearms to protect against attack.319 Meanwhile, American gun
owners, especially in rural areas, continue to view themselves as “take-care-of-yourself
people.”320 They follow the tradition of American colonists who escaped persecution in
Britain and brought firearms to the U.S. to hunt and to defend themselves in order to
survive on the frontier.321 Hence, the ability to own and use firearms was a common law
right in American colonial society.322 After the American Revolution, this common law
right was codified in the Second Amendment “to protect Americans from tyranny that
317
Whitney was a reporter, foreign correspondent, and editor at The New York Times. He was assistant
managing editor in charge of standards and ethics before retiring in 2009, and he wrote Living With Guns:
A Liberal’s Case for the Second Amendment in 2012, which has been referenced thoroughly throughout this
thesis. https://craigrwhitney.com.
318
Personal interview with Craig Whitney, February 6, 2020.
319
Whitney, Living with Guns, 23-24.
320
Id., 24.
321
Id., 43-44.
322
Id., 45.
Leone
78
could be imposed by a strong federal government.”323 Although the nature of firearms has
significantly evolved from colonial times, the message for most American gun owners
remains the same: “…the right of the people to keep and bear arms, shall not be
infringed.”324
Despite also being colonized by Great Britain, colonial Australians did not form
this connection with firearms from the outset. Instead, the involuntary migration of
British convicts on “dangerously overcrowded and filthy decommissioned hulks”325
meant that, unlike early American settlers, colonial Australian convicts did not travel to
the Australian continent with the right to bear arms; in fact, these Australian convicts did
not enjoy many rights at all because they were processed at a colonial penal institution
and given labor assignments upon arrival.326 Whilst early Americans had to protect
themselves from both Native Americans and other European powers in the continental
U.S.,327 Australia was only colonized by the British, and its sole threat to security was
from the Aboriginal groups armed with spears.328 Learning from its failure in the
Revolutionary War, Great Britain made obsolete the necessity of civilians owning a
firearm to protect oneself from violence in Australia by having line regiments serve in
Australia as a part of a cycle.329 The British Empire’s constant protection of Australia
meant that civilian gun ownership on the early frontier was uncommon.330 Additionally,
323
Id., 71.
U.S. Const. Amend. II.
325
Eleanor Conlin Casella, “Prisoner of His Majesty: Postcoloniality and the Archaeology of British Penal
Transportation,” World Archaeology 37, no. 3 (Historical Archaeology, September 2005): 454.
326
Id.
327
For example, The French and Indian War, The Revolutionary War, The War of 1812, The MexicanAmerican War.
328
Connor, The Australian Frontier Wars, 1788-1838, 20.
329
Id., 12.
330
Id., 17.
324
Leone
79
requests from civilians to “organize into militia units to fight on the frontier,” as was the
case with the Port Phillip District settlers in 1838, were ignored and unnecessary for
Australian security.331 Australia’s roots as a penal society and its reliance on the British
Empire up through World War II conditioned Australians to explicitly interpret and
present their convict history as the “national history.”332 This common understanding of
Australia’s culture has bled through the Australian Constitution. Having not rebelled
against Britain like the United States, Australians did not need to resort to violence to
secure their freedom and accepted “their [Britain’s] racial and cultural heritage as the
basis for their idea of nationalism.”333
With these stark differences between the foundations of U.S. and Australian
cultures having been laid out, this thesis on the politics and culture of firearm regulation
and violence in the U.S. and Australia concludes by raising possible solutions to the
United States’ problem of gun violence. In light of Australia’s successful buyback
programs and firearm regulations, would the United States be able to draw inspiration
from the Australian model and implement something similar? Philip Alpers expressed,
“Australia followed standard public health procedures to reduce the risk of multiple
shooting events, and we can see the evidence. It worked.”334 Even Barack Obama during
his second term of presidency in 2016 acknowledged the success of Australia’s endeavors
in claiming, “When Australia had a mass killing… it was just so shocking the entire
country said, ‘Well, we’re going to completely change our gun laws,’ and they did. And
331
Id., 16.
Casella, “Prisoner of His Majesty, 454.
333
Meaney, “Britishness and Australian identity,” 82.
334
Dan Gaffney, “Gun laws stopped mass shootings in Australia,” The University of Sydney, March 13,
2018, https://sydney.edu.au/news-opinion/news/2018/03/13/gun-laws-stopped-mass-shootings-inaustralia.html#.
332
Leone
80
it hasn’t happened since.”335 Despite the significant reduction in gun ownership and mass
shootings in Australia, gun violence has not completely disappeared from the Australian
continent.336 However, compared to the United States, Australia’s rate of all gun deaths
per 100,000 people is 0.88 to the United States’ equivalent of 12.21.337
The Australian system of firearm regulations worked. If the United States was to
follow suit and simply copy Australia’s initiatives, the results would not only be nowhere
as effective but also would probably not work.338 Alpers describes why a massive
reduction in the national stockpile of weapons, like that of Australia, could not be enacted
in the U.S., and he claims, “Because no two jurisdictions share the same problems or
legislative or social settings – let alone attitudes – none can claim to have discovered the
magic bullet.”339 For Australia, the lack of a Second Amendment equivalent made it easy
for John Howard to push forward with the National Firearms Agreement without
infringing on the rights of Australian citizens.340 Also, as a freshly-elected Prime Minister
with a massive majority in Parliament, John Howard had relatively little opposition to his
policies,341 whereas the current division between a Democratic House of Representatives
and a Republican Senate in the U.S. stalls bipartisan action. Lastly, Howard’s speed of
government action following Port Arthur was swift and promising; in just 12 days,
Howard had corralled all six states and two territories to agree to and pass uniform gun
Matthew Grimson, “Port Arthur Massacre: The Shooting Spree That Changed Australia’s Gun Laws,”
NBC News, July 25, 2015, https://www.nbcnews.com/news/world/port-arthur-massacre-shooting-spreechanged-australia-gun-laws-n396476.
336
Katie Beck, “Are Australia’s gun laws the solution for the US?” BBC News, October 4, 2017,
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-australia-35048251.
337
Alpers et al., “United States – Gun Facts, Figures and the Law.”
338
Beck, “Are Australia’s gun laws the solution for the US?”
339
Alpers, “The Big Melt: How One Democracy Changed After Scrapping a Third of its Firearms.”
340
Beck, “Are Australia’s gun laws the solution for the US?”
341
Howard, “Political Review: March 1996-September 1996,” 119.
335
Leone
81
control legislation.342 For the U.S., Katie Beck rightfully expresses, “It is hard to fathom
the U.S. government ever being able to get all 50 states to agree to something, let alone
act that quickly.”343 In total, whereas a national buyback of certain firearms helped fix
Australia’s issue of gun violence, the Australian model cannot be used as a band-aid
solution to the U.S.’s prolonged problem of mass shootings. Instead, the United States
should recognize the success and merit of Australia’s actions while determining the best
course of action towards gun control in the U.S.
The other extreme would be to largely continue how the United States Congress
has been pursuing gun control regulations: by doing relatively nothing. With the NRA
providing “big-dollar campaign spending and purported legions of voters in orange caps”
to politicians that ally with the ideals of the NRA, the political power of the NRA is
capable of injecting the volatile issue of gun control into a campaign making gun control
“quickly dominate the campaign and derail any politician’s packed message.”344 By
preventing any substantive action towards firearm regulations, the NRA’s efforts allow
for the never-ending expansion of the domestic firearms market.345 Along with the NRA,
the recent Supreme Court decisions in D.C. v Heller (2008) and McDonald v Chicago
(2010) have forced some efforts at gun regulation to take a few steps back. While these
decisions do uphold the sanctity of the Second Amendment, they are a colossal
impediment to a state’s ability to decide how to effectively regulate firearms. On top of
this, enshrining the Second Amendment with this much protection allows the NRA and
gun owners to attack any measure of gun control as a “fight against you, your guns, and
Beck, “Are Australia’s gun laws the solution for the US?”
Id.
344
Sugarmann, National Rifle Association: Money-Firepower-Fear, 165.
345
Id., 88.
342
343
Leone
82
your freedom.”346 Ignoring the issues at hand or enacting flimsy legislation to counteract
the problem of gun violence does not fully resolve the crisis; U.S. politicians have to both
respect gun owners’ Second Amendment rights while reaffirming that this right can and
will be regulated to protect the life and liberty of all citizens.
Rather than demanding either full restrictions on guns or no regulations at all, this
thesis shows that a middle ground must be taken on the issue to bring together members
of both the NRA and the gun control coalition in a constructive and respectful
conversation. For what measures should inevitably be taken, this thesis mirrors many of
the proposals laid out by Craig Whitney. First, the database of the National Instant
Criminal Background Check System (NICS) must be augmented to include people who
are drug abusers, mentally ill, or otherwise disqualified to purchase a gun under federal
law.347 Whitney discussed that at the federal level background checks need to be
universal and cover private and registered sales; likewise, at the state level, “red flag
laws” need to be put in place to prevent the sale or possession of guns to mentally ill
individuals.348,349
Conducting a four-year study from 2007 through 2010 on the effect that more firearm
laws have in reducing the number of firearm fatalities, Eric Fleegler et al. found that “a
higher number of firearm laws in a state are associated with a lower rate of firearm
fatalities in the state, overall and for suicides and homicides individually.”350 By dividing
Wayne LaPierre, “NRA’s Wayne LaPierre Stands Strong for Law-Abiding Citizens,” National Rifle
Association, 2019, https://home.nra.org/nras-wayne-lapierre-stands-strong-for-law-abiding-citizens/.
347
Whitney, Living with Guns, 216.
348
Personal interview with Craig Whitney, February 6, 2020.
349
Here, the problem is that state budgets for treating mental illness are under strain, so they do not have
effective ways of treating mental illness. Whitney, Living with Guns, 217.
350
Eric W. Fleegler et al., “Firearm Legislation and Firearm-Related Fatalities in the United States,” JAMA
Intern Med. 173, no. 9 (March 6, 2013): 732.
346
Leone
83
firearm legislation into five categories of (1) curbing firearm trafficking, (2)
strengthening background checks on purchasers of firearms beyond those required by the
Brady Handgun Violence Prevention Act, (3) ensuring child safety, (4) banning military
style assault weapons, and (5) restricting guns in public places, Fleegler et al.’s results
found that between 2007 and 2010, there were 121,084 firearm fatalities of which 73,702
were firearm suicides and 47,382 were firearm homicides.351 Here, the magnitude of
firearm suicides is startling as it an issue that constantly is overshadowed by the
prominence of mass shootings in the media to provoke public opinion. The threat that
firearms pose not only to the victims of mass shootings but also to the firearm owners
themselves that may be suffering from mental health issues and resort to committing
suicide with the quick pull of a trigger. While this thesis has largely looked towards
culture and policy, it would be interesting for a future study to look at the correlation
between mental health and firearm use/abuse.
This leads to the next necessary measure: increasing the penalties for committing
a crime with guns.352 Making the repercussions more intense for gun violence will scare
offenders and is a regulation that the NRA has also had no problem in endorsing.353
Next, a federal firearms trafficking statute needs to be implemented to crack down
on straw purchasers and firearm dealers that knowingly sell to disqualified buyers.354
While it is incredibly tough and most likely impossible for the U.S. to reach uniform
national gun regulation like Australia did, the transfer of firearms across state lines has to
be tightly regulated to prevent firearms that are illegal in one state from being smuggled
351
Id 733-5.
Id., 222.
353
Id.
354
Id., 224.
352
Leone
84
in from a state where said guns are totally legal. A further regulation that will help to
prevent the illegal transfer and use of arms is the “fingerprinting” of bullets and shell
casings in order to trace guns used in crimes.355 With each bullet and shell labelled with
the serial number of the gun, not only will lawful gun owners not have to worry about
being accused for a gun crime they did not commit, but the gun in question will also be
more easily identified. Lastly, the final measure of gun control this thesis will put forward
is the encouragement of all 50 states “to pass legislation requiring state or local licenses
to own a gun, mandate training in the use and storage of firearms, and institute state
registration.”356 Just like drivers need to take a test to demonstrate competency in order to
acquire a driver’s license, gun owners should have to exhibit competency of both firearm
use and safety on a firing range.357 All in all, these are just some of the possible routes to
be taken towards a safer gun culture in the U.S. While the implementation of just a few of
these measures would serve to better gun safety in the U.S., this thesis holds that policies
should be created to enact all of these measures in unison. Without proper safeguards
against holes in the system of firearm sales, regulations, and use, the issue of gun
violence will only be perpetuated in the U.S. After suffering 117 mass shootings since
1982, it is about time the United States steps up and wholesomely addresses the issue at
hand.
At the end of the day, to bring forth effective, visible changes to the United
States’ issue of gun violence, the American people need to break through the
hyperinflation of political polarization and talk rationally with individuals of all political
355
Id., 236.
Id., 228.
357
Id., 229.
356
Leone
85
backgrounds to alleviate partisanship. This is not easy. Craig Whitney described this
conflict as a “dark moment in our political history.”358 The American political culture is
being infused with directing all one’s emotion, hate, and intolerance towards any view
that does not align with one’s own opinion; this inability to converse as equals simply
stalls the creation of beneficial policies and allows the underlying issues to fester. With
regard to firearms, although there will always be sides in the debate engaging in
“vigorous political struggle,” Professor Sanford Levinson emphasizes the importance of
making the political sides appear “more human” to one another:
“Perhaps "we" might be led to stop referring casually to "gun nuts" just as, maybe, members
of the NRA could be brought to understand the real fear that the currently almost uncontrolled
system of gun ownership sparks in the minds of many whom they casually dismiss as
"bleeding-heart liberals." Is not, after all, the possibility of serious, engaged discussion about
political issues at the heart of what is most attractive in both liberal and republican versions of
politics?”359
In order to achieve this form of respectful, critical discussion about proper firearm
regulations, constructive participation from the NRA is necessary.360 Rather than using
scare tactics to label any measure of gun control as a “total confiscation of our [NRA
members] firearms and the end of the Second Amendment,”361 the NRA must revert back
to its founding values of educating and training marksmanship skills.362 Overall, the
success of gun control regulations in the U.S. is contingent upon a “positive recognition
by all Americans… that the right to keep and bear arms is an individual right.”363 While
the right is not absolute and comes with certain responsibilities, this does not mean law-
358
Personal interview with Craig Whitney, February 6, 2020.
Sanford Levinson, “The Embarrassing Second Amendment,” The Yale Law Journal 99, no. 637 (1989):
658-659.
360
Whitney, Living with Guns, 211.
361
NRA memo sent out to members on March 1, 2010. Quoted in Whitney, Living with Guns, 160.
362
Id., 211.
363
Id., 212.
359
Leone
86
abiding individuals should be treated as if they were criminals just because they own a
gun.364 Every American, gun owners and non-gun owners alike, has to come together and
recognize one’s civic duty to do whatever it takes to make the free use of firearms safer
than what it is presently. For Australia, the remedy was straightforward as they had no
culturally or constitutionally ingrained sense of a right to bear arms. The United States,
on the other hand, must balance its constitutional and cultural rights to rectify the extent
of firearm violence in the U.S. without completely impeding on the gun rights of its
citizens like Australia has done.
364
Id.
Leone
87
Bibliography
Albert, Craig J. “Assault Weapons Ban Just Won’t Work.” The New York Times, September 16, 1994.
https://www.nytimes.com/1994/09/16/opinion/l-assault-weapons-ban-just-won-t-work260967.html?module=inline.
Alpers, Philip, Amélie Rossetti and Daniel Salinas. “United States – Gun Facts, Figures and the Law.”
Sydney School of Public Health, The University of Sydney, GunPolicy.org, 2019.
https://www.gunpolicy.org/firearms/region/united-states.
Alpers, Philip and Zareh Ghazarian. "The ‘perfect storm’ of gun control: From policy inertia to world
leader." In Successful Public Policy: Lessons from Australia and New Zealand, edited by Luetjens
Joannah, Mintrom Michael, and Hart Paul’t, 207-233. Acton ACT, Australia: ANU Press, 2019.
www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctvh4zj6k.16.
Alpers, Philip. “The Big Melt: How One Democracy Changed After Scrapping a Third of its Firearms.” In
Reducing Gun Violence in America: Informing Policy with Evidence and Analysis, edited by
Daniel W. Webster and Jon S. Vernick. Baltimore: John Hopkins University Press, 2013.
Australian Government. “How Government Works.” Australia.gov.au. https://www.australia.gov.au/aboutgovernment/how-government-works.
Bailey, Brendan. “Bills Digest No. 155 2002-03: National Handgun Buyback Bill 2003.” Parliament of
Australia, May 22, 2003.
https://www.aph.gov.au/Parliamentary_Business/Bills_Legislation/bd/bd0203/03bd155.
Beck, Katie. “Are Australia’s gun laws the solution for the US?” BBC News, October 4, 2017.
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-australia-35048251.
Berkowitz, Bonnie, Chris Alcantara and Denise Lu. “The terrible numbers that grow with each mass
shooting.” The Washington Post, Updated December 12, 2019.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/graphics/2018/national/mass-shootings-in-america/.
Blocher, Joseph and Darrell A.H. Miller. The Positive Second Amendment: Rights, Regulation, and the
Future of Heller. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2018.
Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives. “National Firearms Act.” ATF, 1934.
Chapman, Simon. Over Our Dead Bodies: Port Arthur and Australia’s fight for gun control. Reprint,
Sydney: Sydney University Press, 2013.
Chappell, Duncan, Peter Grabosky, Paul Wilson, and Satyanshu Mukherjee. “Firearms and violence in
Australia.” Trends & issues in crime and criminal justice, no. 10 (Canberra: Australian Institute of
Criminology, 1988): 1-5.
Conlin Casella, Eleanor. “Prisoner of His Majesty: Postcoloniality and the Archaeology of British Penal
Transportation.” World Archaeology 37, no. 3 (Historical Archaeology, September 2005): 453467.
Connor, John. The Australian Frontier Wars, 1788-1838. Sydney: University of New South Wales Press,
2002.
Daley, Paul. “Our Most Important War: The legacy of frontier conflict.” In The Honest History Book,
edited by David Stephens and Alison Broinowski. Sydney: NewSouth.
Donnelly, Larry. “America’s gun culture: What makes Americans so attached to their weapons?”
TheJournal.ie, March 4, 2018. https://www.thejournal.ie/readme/americas-gun-culture-3877087Mar2018/.
Donohue, John and Theodora Boulouta. “That Assault Weapon Ban? It Really Did Work.” The New York
Times, September 4, 2019. https://www.nytimes.com/2019/09/04/opinion/assault-weaponban.html?smid=nytcore-ios-share.
Douglas, Roger. “Gun Laws and Sudden Death: Do They Make Much Difference?” The Australian
Quarterly 69, no. 1 (1997): 50-62. https://www.jstor.org/stable/20634765.
Elkins, Zachary, Tom Ginsburg and James Melton. “U.S. Gun Rights Truly Are American
Exceptionalism.” Bloomberg Opinion, March 7, 2013.
https://www.bloomberg.com/opinion/articles/2013-03-07.
“Firearms-Control Legislation and Policy: Australia.” Library of Congress, July 30, 2015.
https://www.loc.gov/law/help/firearms-control/australia.php.
Leone
88
Fleegler, Eric W., Lois K. Lee, Michael C. Monuteaux, David Hemmingway, and Rebekah Mannix.
“Firearm Legislation and Firearm-Related Fatalities in the United States.” JAMA Intern Med. 173,
no. 9 (March 6, 2013): 732-740.
Follman, Mark, Gavin Aronsen and Deanna Pan. “US Mass Shootings, 1982-2019: Data From Mother
Jones’ Investigation.” Mother Jones Updated: February 26, 2020.
https://www.motherjones.com/politics/2012/12/mass-shootings-mother-jones-full-data/.
Gaffney, Dan. “Gun laws stopped mass shootings in Australia.” The University of Sydney, March 13, 2018.
https://sydney.edu.au/news-opinion/news/2018/03/13/gun-laws-stopped-mass-shootings-inaustralia.html#.
Giffords Law Center. “Background Check Procedures.” Giffords Law Center to Prevent Gun Violence,
2019. https://lawcenter.giffords.org/gun-laws/policy-areas/background-checks.
Grimson, Matthew. “Port Arthur Massacre: The Shooting Spree That Changed Australia’s Gun Laws.”
NBC News, July 25, 2015. https://www.nbcnews.com/news/world/port-arthur-massacre-shootingspree-changed-australia-gun-laws-n396476.
Howard, Bob. “Political Review: March 1996-September 1996.” The Australian Quarterly 68, no. 4
(1996): 117-130. https://www.jstor.org/stable/20634756.
Hughes, Robert. The Fatal Shore: The epic of Australia’s founding. New York: Vintage Books, 1988.
Johnson, David Kyle. “Guns Don’t Kill People, People Do? What exactly is wrong with the argument.”
Psychology Today, February 12, 2013. https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog.
Karberg, Jennifer C. and Ronald J. Frandsen et al. “Background Checks for Firearm Transfers, 2015 –
Statistical Tables.” Bureau of Justice Statistics, November 2017.
LaPierre, Wayne. “NRA’s Wayne LaPierre Stands Strong for Law-Abiding Citizens.” National Rifle
Association, 2019, https://home.nra.org/nras-wayne-lapierre-stands-strong-for-law-abidingcitizens/.
“Legislative Reforms.” Australian Institute of Criminology, November 3, 2017.
https://aic.gov.au/publications/rpp/rpp116/legislative-reforms.
Levinson, Sanford. “The Embarrassing Second Amendment.” The Yale Law Journal 99, no. 637 (1989):
637-659.
Masters, Johnathan. “U.S. Gun Policy: Global Comparisons.” Council on Foreign Relations, Updated
August 6, 2019. https://www.cfr.org/backgrounder/us-gun-policy-global-comparisons.
McClenathan, Jane, Molly Pahn and Michael Siegel. “The Changing Landscape of U.S. Gun Policy: State
Firearm Laws, 1991-2016.” Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, 2016.
Meaney, Neville. “Britishness and Australian identity: The problem of nationalism in Australian history
and historiography.” Australian Historical Studies 32, no. 116 (2001): 76-90.
Melleuish, Gregory. “No longer tied to Britain, Australia is still searching for its place in the world.” The
Conversation, January 26, 2017. https://theconversation.com/no-longer-tied-to-britain-australia-isstill-searching-for-its-place-in-the-world-70407.
Miller, Matthew, Lisa Hepburn and Deborah Azrael. “Firearm Acquisition Without Background
Checks.” Annals of Internal Medicine 166, no. 4 (2017): 233–241.
Morton, David. "Gunning for the World." Foreign Policy, no. 152 (2006): 58-67.
www.jstor.org/stable/25461992.
National Australia Day Council. “About Australia Day.” Australia Day.
https://www.australiaday.org.au/about-australia-day/.
“New Zealand Introduces New Gun Control Bills Six Months After Christchurch Massacre.” Public Radio
International (PRI), September 13, 2019.
https://search.proquest.com/docview/2289946704?accountid=11456.
Norberry, Jennifer, Derek Woolner, and Kirsty Magarey. “After Port Arthur – Issues of Gun Control in
Australia.” Parliament of Australia, May 7, 1996.
https://www.aph.gov.au/About_Parliament/Parliamentary_Departments/Parliamentary_Library/Pu
blications_Archive/CIB/cib9596/96cib16#National%20uniform%20gun%20laws.
Parliament of Australia. “Infosheet 20 – The Australian system of government.”
https://www.aph.gov.au/About_Parliament/House_of_Representatives/Powers_practice_and_proc
edure/00_-_Infosheets/Infosheet_20_-_The_Australian_system_of_government.
Patience, Alan. “To Be or Not to Be in Asia?” In Australian Foreign Policy in Asia: Middle Power or
Awkward Partner? London: Palgrave MacMillan, 2017.
Leone
89
Patrick, A. Odysseus. “Australia’s Gun Laws Are Not a Model for America.” The New York Times,
February 22, 2018. https://www.nytimes.com/2018/02/23/opinion/australias-gun-lawsamerica.html.
Pew Research Center. “Gun Policy Remains Divisive, But Several Proposals Still Draw Bipartisan
Support” October 18, 2018. https://www.people-press.org/2018/10/18/gun-policy-remainsdivisive-but-several-proposals-still-draw-bipartisan-support/.
Rawle, William. A View of the Constitution of the United States of America (Philadelphia 1829). In “The
Founders’ Constitution: Vol. 5, Amend. II, Doc. 9.” http://presspubs.uchicago.edu/founders/documents/amendIIs9.html.
Reuter, Peter and Jenny Mouzos. “Australia: A Massive Buy Back of Low-Risk Guns.” In Evaluating Gun
Policy: Effects on Crime and Violence, edited by Jens Ludwig, and Philip J. Cook, 121-156.
Washington, D.C.: Brookings Institution Press, 2003.
Rosewood, Jack. Martin Bryant: The Port Arthur Massacre. New York: Wiq Media, 2015.
Sitzmann, Joseph E. "High-Value, Low-Value, and No-Value Guns: Applying Free Speech Law to the
Second Amendment." The University of Chicago Law Review 86, no. 7 (November 2019): 19812030. www.jstor.org/stable/26792622.
Smith, Tom, “Why Great Britain Sent its Prisoners to Australia.” Culture Trip, August 13, 2018.
https://theculturetrip.com/pacific/australia/articles/why-great-britain-sent-its-prisoners-toaustralia/.
Stockler, Asher. “Clinton-Era Assault Weapons Ban Did Work, According to New Research.” Newsweek,
September 28, 2019. https://www.newsweek.com/assault-weapons-ban-1994-gun-rights-1461951.
Sugarmann, Josh. National Rifle Association: Money-Firepower-Fear. District of Columbia: Violence
Policy Center, 1992.
Tanter, Richard. “Tightly Bound: The United States and Australia’s Alliance-Dependent Militarization.”
The Asia Pacific Journal 16, no. 2 (June 1, 2018). https://apjjf.org/2018/11/Tanter.html.
“The Fall of Singapore.” Commonwealth War Graves Commission. https://www.cwgc.org/history-andarchives/second-world-war/campaigns/war-in-the-east/singapore.
“‘There Will Be Changes’ to Gun Laws, New Zealand Prime Minister Says.” The New York Times, March
17, 2019. https://www.nytimes.com/2019/03/17/world/asia/new-zealand-shooting.html.
Toor, Pooja. “United States vs. Everybody, a comparative analysis of gun laws in America and various
countries around the world.” Journal of Law and International Affairs at Penn State Law, April 3,
2018. https://sites.psu.edu/jlia/author/pxt41/#_edn4.
Townshend, Ashley and Brendan Thomas-Noone. “There's a Part of the US-Australia Alliance We Rarely
Talk about — Nuclear Weapons.” ABC News, February 27, 2019. www.abc.net.au/news/2019-0227/us-australia-nuclear-alliance-in-the-indo-pacific/10849350.
Ubinas, Helen. “I bought an AR-15 semi-automatic rifle in Philly in 7 minutes.” The Philadelphia Inquirer,
June 13, 2016. https://www.inquirer.com/philly/columnists/helen_ubinas.
Unsworth, Barrie. “Failure on guns an affront.” Sydney Morning Herald, May 10, 1996.
Viser, Matt and Felicia Sonmez. “Joe Biden releases gun plan that would reinstate assault
weapons ban and establish a voluntary buyback program.” The Washington Post, October 2, 2019.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/.
Volokh, Eugene. “Is the United States of America a republic or democracy.” The Washington Post, May
13, 2015. https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/volokh-conspiracy/wp/2015/05/13/is-the-unitedstates-of-america-a-republic-or-a-democracy/.
Whitney, Craig R. Living with Guns: A Liberal’s Case for the Second Amendment. New York: Public
Affairs, 2012.