Gender/Nationality Intersections in Attitudes Toward Gun Carry among Israeli Citizens

Gender/Nationality Intersections in Attitudes Toward Gun Carry among Israeli Citizens

By: Aharoni S.B., Lewin A.C., Sa’ar A.
Published in: Sociological Perspectives
SDGs : SDG 05  |  Units: Social Sciences  | Time: 2021 |  Link
Description: The study explores how nationality and gender effect attitudes on the presence, use, and misuse of guns by security forc es and civilians in Israel. Using data from a national survey (n = 721), we find that Israelis, Jews, and Arabs have more positive attitudes toward military firearms than civilian gun carry. The vast majority agree that display of military arms increases the public sense of security. Numbers are much lower regarding civilian carry. Most respondents, Jews and Arabs, would interfere if witnessed public misuse of firearms. An intersectional analysis finds (1) a gender gap, men have higher odds of reporting a firearm in the household than women; (2) Jews have more positive attitudes toward firearms than Arabs; (3) Jewish men have more positive attitudes toward civilian carry than Jewish women. This gender gap does not appear among Arabs; (4) Jews are more favorable of self-protection as a justification to use arms than Arabs. © The Author(s) 2021.