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Homicide Studies, Vol. 9, No. 2, 83-108 (2005)
DOI: 10.1177/1088767904274160

Firearm Use, Injury, and Lethality in Assaultive Violence

An Examination of Ethnic Differences

Amie L. Nielsen

University of Miami

Ramiro Martinez, Jr.

Florida International University

Richard Rosenfeld

University of Missouri-St. Louis

This article extends the study of race and ethnicity and violence by examining ethnic differences in firearm use, injury, and lethality in assaultive violence (homicide and aggravated assault) in the multiethnic city of Miami. Specifically, the article compares Latinos relative to non-Latino Blacks and non-Latino Whites. Controlling for the effects of other victim, offender, and incident characteristics, logistic and multinomial logistic regression analyses indicate that firearm use has large and similar effects on event lethality for Latino and non-Latino Black offenders but no significant effect for non-Latino Whites. However, Latino, Black, and White attackers are equally likely to use a gun in violent encounters. The authors discuss the implications of these ethnic patterns in terms of prevailing conceptions of firearm violence.

Key Words: ethnicity • firearms • violence


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C. C. Branas, D. Culhane, T. S. Richmond, and D. J. Wiebe
Novel Linkage of Individual and Geographic Data to Study Firearm Violence
Homicide Studies, August 1, 2008; 12(3): 298 - 320.
[Abstract] [PDF]