In The Gun Gap, Mark R. Joslyn advances gun owners as a new
classification for understanding political behavior and attitudes. He
demonstrates a "gun gap," which captures the differences between gun
owners and non-gun owners, and shows how this gap improves conventional
behavioral and attitudinal models. The gap represents an important
explanation for voter choice, voter turnout, perceptions of personal and
public safety, preferences for gun control policies, and support for the
death penalty. Moreover, the 2016 presidential election witnessed the
largest recorded gun gap in history. The Gun Gap thus affords a new
and compelling vantage point to evaluate modern mass politics.