Innovative Gun Violence Course Generates Novel Journal Issue
In the Press
Monday, January 25, 2021
Innovative Gun Violence Course Generates Novel Journal Issue
The United States leads the developed world in rates of gun violence, a true epidemic that affects everyone. The statistics can be alarming: annually, nearly 40,000 Americans die due to gun violence, an average of over 100 people per day. Another 73,000 people experience firearm injuries — some life-altering in severity.
To examine the deleterious effects of this growing crisis, Yale Law School faculty and students convened collaborators from Yale University and across the country to publish a groundbreaking special issue of
) devoted to the gun violence epidemic. The issue, created through a partnership between two innovative Law School centers, the Solomon Center for Health Law & Policy and The Justice Collaboratory, features 26 articles by students, professors, scholars, physicians, advocates, and other experts who seek to address the problem through interdisciplinary conversation and research. The authors tackled the issue from four angles — criminal justice, medicine and public health, the roles of regulation and litigation, and data and empirics.