Building a National Firearms Data Infrastructure
This project is part of the collection, Implementing Data Infrastructure to Reduce Firearms Violence.
Problem
A critical lack of data around firearms violence hinders effective preventive policies.
In 2021, 48,830 Americans lost their lives to gun-related injuries, the highest toll on record according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Firearms are now the number one cause of death among American children and teens. Yet there is no comprehensive national or state-level plan for gathering and disseminating firearms use and injury data—a void that limits efforts of legislators and policymakers to reduce violence. The country needs a nonpartisan data infrastructure to inform policymaking that improves public safety by reducing the number of firearm accidents, suicides, homicides, and assaults.
Solution
NORC partnered with Arnold Ventures to target ways to improve the U.S. firearms data infrastructure.
NORC’s collaboration with Arnold Ventures, a philanthropy that funds public health research to minimize injustice, began in 2015. The goal of the ongoing partnership is to produce practical guidance for creating a rigorous, objective, and sustainable firearms data architecture that local, state, and federal policymakers and their constituents can use. Over several years, the partnership has launched a multi-pronged effort that included reviewing existing firearms data sources, convening two separate expert panels, and producing comprehensive data infrastructure. This work yielded:
- The State of Firearms Data, 2019. This report, the result of panel meetings of 14 multidisciplinary professionals, was the first step in determining every available collection of firearms data across the criminal justice, health, and public health fields.
- A Conceptual Framework for a Firearms Data Infrastructure, 2020. The paper presents a comprehensive plan for identifying and adopting advances in social science and developing and maintaining a data infrastructure and architecture.
- Improving Data Infrastructure to Reduce Firearms Violence, 2021. NORC, the Data Foundation, Arnold Ventures, and the National Prevention Science Coalition jointly hosted a webinar featuring nine speakers, who include distinguished academics, trailblazing practitioners, and government leaders.
- A Blueprint for a U.S. Firearms Data Infrastructure, 2021. This paper, a synthesis of the work of the expert panel, presents a concise set of 17 actionable recommendations.
Result
NORC’s work is informing policy and practice related to firearms violence data.
After intensive data collection and research, NORC focused on three areas of improvement that have the power to build a firearms data infrastructure that will substantially reduce gun violence. The top priority is creating a database of nonfatal firearms injuries to fill the near total dearth of this information. Second, policymakers need to combat decades of U.S. government policy banning firearms research. Opening avenues to study the relationship between firearms ownership, storage, and use and suicide, assault, homicide, and accidental injury is critical to developing a more coherent public policy that maximizes public safety. Third, ensuring consistent, accurate data collection and reporting at the local level is essential to the success of any national firearms research database or surveillance system.