"James B. Jacobs has produced a primer on gun control laws in the United States, an up-close view of the politics of gun control and a comprehensive examination of the likelihood that legislative efforts to control illegal guns will be successful. Professor Jacobs characteristically is scholarly, clear, exhaustive in his research, and not without opinion. Professor Jacobs, a highly respected scholat, has always been dedicated to finding interventions against violence. He asks the right questions and the skepticism expressed in the book Can Gun Control Work? Is shared by many. It is clearly the burden of the gun control movement to demonstrate effectiveness."--New York Law Journal
"[a] clear-eyed analytical approach of a first rate legal scholar....Jacobs skillfully catalogues the vast array of legislative initiatives already adopted, as well as the large number of potential regulatory approaches to gun violence....[and] usefully underscores how difficult it would be to overcome all the obstacles--constitutional, political and practical--to the effective regulation of guns in a society that is not fully committed to that goal."-- The American Prospect
"This book deserves serious consideration. It provides a direct challenge to control advocates to address the mechanics of their proposed regulatory schemes and to think more realistically about the details and potential difficulties of implementation."--The Law and Politics Book Review
"If close attention to facts, reason, and common sense has any claim on the public's thinking, this book may well break the polarized debate over gun control and make it possible to settle on a sensible public policy regarding guns, gun safety and the reduction of gun violence. This is a "must read" for anyone concerned about the debate over gun control."--Jan Dizard, Amherst College, co-editor of Gun in America