Experts: Gun violence and legislation
New gun control legislation the federal government tabled Monday includes a national freeze on the purchase, sale, importation and transfer of handguns in Canada. The legislation comes after a number of mass shootings in the United States, including a recent shooting at an elementary school that killed 19 children and two adults in Uvalde, Texas. ()
Here are some experts from 鶹AV that can provide comment on this issue:
American history
Jason Opal, Associate Professor, Department of History and Classical Studies
“As in the wake of the Sandy Hook school shooting of 2012, the recent mass murder of elementary school children In Uvalde, Texas will spur gun-control supporters in the United States to push for new restrictions on buying weapons. However, they will run into two distinct but related forces: First, the raw political power of the National Rifle Association and the gun manufacturers for whom it serves as a lobby, and second, a deep pro-gun tradition that claims ancestry to the 2nd Amendment but actually derives more from frontier violence and slavery.”
Jason Opal is an Associate Professor in the Department of History and Classical Studies, where he teaches and writes about the U.S. Constitution in different periods of American history. His work tries to integrate social, cultural, and intellectual history and to shed light on such broad topics as nationalism, capitalism, democracy and U.S.-Canada foreign relations.
jason.opal [at] mcgill.ca (English, French)
Public health
Myrna Lashley, Assistant Professor, Department of Psychiatry
"It is my conviction that many societal problems are often 'settled' through gun violence. Since the issues are myriad, I would suggest that the epidemic of gun violence be viewed as a public health concern and be addressed as such."
Myrna Lashley is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Psychiatry and an Adjunct Researcher at the Lady Davis Institute for Medical Research of the Jewish General Hospital. She is the Chair of the Cross-Cultural Roundtable on Security, as well as Vice-chair of the board of the École Nationale de Police du Québec. Her current research interests are in cultural aspects of youth mental health, and cultural aspects of radicalization leading to violence.
myrna.lashley2 [at] mcgill.ca (English)