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The Second Amendment and Gun Control

Book

The Second Amendment and Gun Control

DOI link for The Second Amendment and Gun Control

The Second Amendment and Gun Control book

Freedom, Fear, and the American Constitution

The Second Amendment and Gun Control

DOI link for The Second Amendment and Gun Control

The Second Amendment and Gun Control book

Freedom, Fear, and the American Constitution
ByJon Yorke, Anne Richardson Oakes, Kevin Yuill, Joe Street
Edition 1st Edition
First Published 2017
eBook Published 15 September 2017
Pub. Location London
Imprint Routledge
DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315201887
Pages 170
eBook ISBN 9781315201887
Subjects Area Studies, Humanities, Law, Politics & International Relations, Social Sciences
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Yuill, K., & Street, J. (Eds.). (2017). The Second Amendment and Gun Control: Freedom, Fear, and the American Constitution (1st ed.). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315201887

ABSTRACT

The Second Amendment, by far the most controversial amendment to the US Constitution, will soon celebrate its 225th anniversary. Yet, despite the amount of ink spilled over this controversy, the debate continues on into the 21st century. Initially written with a view towards protecting the nascent nation from more powerful enemies and preventing the tyranny experienced during the final years of British rule, the Second Amendment has since become central to discussions about the balance between security and freedom. It features in election contests and informs cultural discussions about race and gender.

This book seeks to broaden the discussion. It situates discussion about gun controls within contemporary debates about citizenship, culture, philosophy and foreign policy as well as in the more familiar terrain of politics and history. It features experts on the Constitution as well as chapters discussing the symbolic importance of Annie Oakley, the role of firearms in race, and filmic representations of armed Hispanic girl gangs. It asks about the morality of gun controls and of not imposing them.

The collection presents a balanced view between those who favour more gun controls and those who would prefer fewer of them. It is infused with the belief that through honest and open debate the often bitter cultural divide on the Second Amendment can be overcome and real progress made. It contains a diverse range of perspectives including, uniquely, a European perspective on this most American of issues.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

chapter |7 pages

Introduction

Edited ByKevin Yuill, Joe Street

chapter 1|17 pages

Constitutional mythology and the future of Second Amendment jurisprudence after Heller

BySaul Cornell

chapter 2|11 pages

The Second Amendment right to self-defence

The core freedom in the new century
ByJoyce Lee Malcolm

chapter 3|12 pages

Annie, get your gun

Women, performance and the western heroine
ByKaren Jones

chapter 4|17 pages

“A gun is a gun in anyone’s hand”

Shooting the gang girl in Mi Vida Loca
ByEmma Horrex

chapter 5|18 pages

“The thought of a black male with a weapon scares America”

African Americans, the Second Amendment, and the racial politics of armed self-defense in the civil rights era and beyond
BySimon Wendt, Rebecca Rössling

chapter 6|15 pages

From virtuous armed citizen to “cramped little risk-fearing man”

The meaning of firearms in an insecure era
ByKevin Yuill

chapter 7|12 pages

Gun rights and the rule of law

ByFirmin DeBrabander

chapter 8|13 pages

To endure for all time or to Amendment change with the times? The Supreme Court and the Second Amendment

ByEmma Long

chapter 9|16 pages

Mr Gingrich’s bequest

Globalising the Second Amendment?
ByPeter Squires

chapter 10|16 pages

The universal right of selfdefense and the auxiliary right to defensive arms

ByDavid B. Kopel
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