Marginal Structural Models to Estimate Causal Effects of Right-to-Carry Laws on Crime

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Abstract

Right-to-carry (RTC) laws allow the legal carrying of concealed firearms for defense, in certain states in the United States. I used modern causal inference methodology from epidemiology to examine the effect of RTC laws on crime over a period from 1959 up to 2016. I fitted marginal structural models (MSMs), using inverse probability weighting (IPW) to correct for criminological, economic, political and demographic confounders. Results indicate that RTC laws significantly increase violent crime by 7.5% and property crime by 6.1%. RTC laws significantly increase murder and manslaughter, robbery, aggravated assault, burglary, larceny theft and motor vehicle theft rates. Applying this method to this topic for the first time addresses methodological shortcomings in previous studies such as conditioning away the effect, overfit and the inappropriate use of county level measurements. Data and analysis code for this article are available online.

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Van Der Wal, W. M. (2022). Marginal Structural Models to Estimate Causal Effects of Right-to-Carry Laws on Crime. Statistics and Public Policy, 9(1), 163–174. https://doi.org/10.1080/2330443X.2022.2120136

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