The California Firearm Violence Research Center is a research center at University of California, Davis, founded July 2017. [1] It was approved for funding by the California state legislature on June 16, 2016. [2] The center operates within the University of California and is the country’s first state-funded firearm violence research center. [3] [4] Garen Wintemute and Senator Lois Wolk led the proposal to create the center. [2] With access to California's gun violence data, the center investigates policy efficacy, links between gun violence and alcohol abuse, and more. [2] California's annual death rate related to gun violence has dropped 20% since 2000, despite an unchanged national rate. [3] This center hopes to determine whether other states can replicate this outcome, as research may surface factors that led to the decline. [3] The National Rifle Association of America opposed the inclusion of the center, as they have lobbied for decades against federal and taxpayer money researching gun violence. [5] Several bills have been turned down in Congress due to a lack of data on the impact of gun violence on public health, and the center's founders hope to provide necessary data to advance legislation. [5]
The California Firearm Violence Research Center is a research center at University of California, Davis, founded July 2017. [1] It was approved for funding by the California state legislature on June 16, 2016. [2] The center operates within the University of California and is the country’s first state-funded firearm violence research center. [3] [4] Garen Wintemute and Senator Lois Wolk led the proposal to create the center. [2] With access to California's gun violence data, the center investigates policy efficacy, links between gun violence and alcohol abuse, and more. [2] California's annual death rate related to gun violence has dropped 20% since 2000, despite an unchanged national rate. [3] This center hopes to determine whether other states can replicate this outcome, as research may surface factors that led to the decline. [3] The National Rifle Association of America opposed the inclusion of the center, as they have lobbied for decades against federal and taxpayer money researching gun violence. [5] Several bills have been turned down in Congress due to a lack of data on the impact of gun violence on public health, and the center's founders hope to provide necessary data to advance legislation. [5]