...Since at least 1965, the false assertion that the United States has the industrialized world’s highest murder rate has been an artifact of politically motivated Soviet minimization designed to hide the true homicide rates. 2 Since well before that date, the Soviet Union possessed extremely stringent gun controls that were effectuated
by a police state apparatus providing stringent enforcement.
So successful was that regime that few Russian civilians now have firearms and very few murders involve them. Yet, manifest suc‐cess in keeping its people disarmed did not prevent the Soviet Union from having far and away the highest murder rate in the developed world. In the 1960s and early 1970s, the gun‐less So‐viet Union’s murder rates paralleled or generally exceeded those of gun‐ridden America.
While American rates stabilized and then steeply declined, however, Russian murder increased so drasti‐cally that by the early 1990s the Russian rate was three times higher than that of the United States. Between 1998‐2004 (the lat‐est figure available for Russia), Russian murder rates were nearly four times higher than American rates. Similar murder rates also characterize the Ukraine, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, and various other now‐independent European nations of the former U.S.S.R.
Thus, in the United States and the former Soviet Union transition‐ing into current‐day Russia, “homicide results suggest that where guns are scarce other weapons are substituted in killings.” While American gun ownership is quite high, Table 1 shows many other developed nations (e.g., Norway, Finland, Germany, France, Denmark) with high rates of gun ownership. These countries, however, have murder rates as low or lower than many devel‐oped nations in which gun ownership is much rarer. For example,
Luxembourg, where handguns are totally banned and ownership of any kind of gun is minimal, had a murder rate nine times higher than Germany in 2002.
http://www.law.harvard.edu/students/orgs/jlpp/Vol30_No2_KatesMauseronline.pdf
by a police state apparatus providing stringent enforcement.
So successful was that regime that few Russian civilians now have firearms and very few murders involve them. Yet, manifest suc‐cess in keeping its people disarmed did not prevent the Soviet Union from having far and away the highest murder rate in the developed world. In the 1960s and early 1970s, the gun‐less So‐viet Union’s murder rates paralleled or generally exceeded those of gun‐ridden America.
While American rates stabilized and then steeply declined, however, Russian murder increased so drasti‐cally that by the early 1990s the Russian rate was three times higher than that of the United States. Between 1998‐2004 (the lat‐est figure available for Russia), Russian murder rates were nearly four times higher than American rates. Similar murder rates also characterize the Ukraine, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, and various other now‐independent European nations of the former U.S.S.R.
Thus, in the United States and the former Soviet Union transition‐ing into current‐day Russia, “homicide results suggest that where guns are scarce other weapons are substituted in killings.” While American gun ownership is quite high, Table 1 shows many other developed nations (e.g., Norway, Finland, Germany, France, Denmark) with high rates of gun ownership. These countries, however, have murder rates as low or lower than many devel‐oped nations in which gun ownership is much rarer. For example,
Luxembourg, where handguns are totally banned and ownership of any kind of gun is minimal, had a murder rate nine times higher than Germany in 2002.
http://www.law.harvard.edu/students/orgs/jlpp/Vol30_No2_KatesMauseronline.pdf