| Literature DB >> 28903713 |
Wolfgang Stroebe1, N Pontus Leander1, Arie W Kruglanski2.
Abstract
Americans are the world's best armed citizens and public polling suggests protection/self-defense is their main reason for gun ownership. However, there is virtually no psychological research on gun ownership. The present article develops the first psychological process model of defensive gun ownership-specifically, a two-component model that considers both the antecedents and consequences of owning a gun for protection/self-defense. We demonstrate that different levels of threat construal-the specific perceived threat of assault and a diffuse threat of a dangerous world-independently predict handgun ownership; we also show how utility judgments can explain the motivated reasoning that drives beliefs about gun rights. We tested our model in two independent samples of gun owners (total N = 899), from just before and after the Orlando mass shooting. This study illustrates how social-cognitive theories can help explain what motivates Americans to own handguns and advocate for broad rights to carry and use them.Keywords: gun-related beliefs; motivated cognition; self-defense motives; threat perceptions
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28903713 DOI: 10.1177/0146167217703952
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pers Soc Psychol Bull ISSN: 0146-1672