Canada should consider banning handguns, says U of T expert in New York Times

August 1, 2018 by U of T News

Like students in his University of Toronto course on guns and mass shootings in U.S. history, Jooyoung Lee had felt Toronto was immune to the kind of gun violence plaguing Los Angeles, Philadelphia and other U.S. cities.

But several deadly gun attacks this summer, including the shooting along the Danforth last week, have shown that “mass shootings are no longer a uniquely American problem,” Lee says in the New York Times.

The associate professor of sociology and California expat argues that Canada should consider banning handguns, as Britain and Australia have done – especially since 62 per cent of gun-related homicides in Canada are committed with handguns.

The Danforth shooting, which was perpetrated by a man who was reported to be mentally ill, also highlights gaps in Canada’s health-care system, Lee says.

    “My concern is that we will fall back into the comforting stories about how safe Canada is,” Lee says. “My hope is that instead, this time, we open the difficult conversation about whether civilians ought to own handguns, and what it would take to provide humane care for those suffering from mental illness.”

    Read the full op-ed in the New York Times: Does Canada Need Better Gun Control?