Researchers believe more research needs to be done (typical researcher BS)
I’ve done research too and have an actual answer for  ‘gun policy’ that needs no further research.
“A well regulated Militia being necessary for the security of a Free State, the Right of The People to Keep and Bear Arms SHALL NOT BE INFRINGED

Which is so simple, only an intellectual can’t understand it.

Now, when these ‘researchers’ say we’re “playing fast and loose with the second amendment” by reading it the way it was written, I’ll tell them, Yes, the Bill of Rights is a “fast and loose” concept, if one chooses to see it that way.
The proper answer is; You don’t like it? Tough. That’s exactly why it exists, so people who hate it can’t do anything about it. That’s the whole point about rights, especially the ones the founders felt were so important they need to be specifically enumerated from government restriction.


 

New RAND Report on Gun Policy Disagreement

The RAND Corporation just released a new report, The Magnitude and Sources of Disagreement Among Gun Policy Experts. Both Center faculty co-directors, Joseph Blocher and Darrell Miller, participated as experts.
The Report’s key findings include:
(1)experts were divided on whether they favored more permissive or less permissive policies, with sharp differences on select laws like assault weapon bans, gun licensing, and registration,

(2) not all policies generated such diametrically opposed views; many experts agreed on largely law enforcement solutions like various prohibitor possessor laws and also child access prevention laws, and

(3) experts prioritized laws that would reduce firearm homicides and suicides, suggesting that more evidence on different proposals’ effectiveness could generate more agreement.

Here’s the overview of the Report:

The effects of firearm policies, though frequently debated, have historically received less-rigorous scientific evaluation than have the effects of other policies affecting public safety, health, and recreation. Despite improvements in recent years, there is still limited evidence of how some gun policies that are frequently proposed or enacted in the United States are likely to affect important outcomes (such as firearm homicides, property crime, and the right to bear arms). In areas without strong scientific evidence, policymakers and the public rely heavily on what policy advocates or social scientists believe the effects are most likely to be.

In this report, part of the RAND Gun Policy in America initiative, RAND researchers describe the combined results from two fieldings (2016 and 2020) of a survey of gun policy experts. Respondents were asked to estimate the likely effects of 19 gun policies on ten outcomes. The researchers use these and other responses to establish the diversity of beliefs among gun policy experts, assess where experts are in more or less agreement on the effects of gun laws, and evaluate whether differences in the policies favored by experts result from differences in experts’ assumptions about the policies’ effects or differences in experts’ policy objectives.

The analysis suggests that experts on different sides of the gun policy debate share some objectives but disagree on which policies will achieve those objectives. Therefore, collecting stronger evidence about the true effects of policies is, the researchers believe, a necessary step toward building greater consensus on which policies to pursue.