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“Horner
has produced a detailed, well-organized, and ably written treatment of
the struggle over the right to carry concealed weapons in Missouri. He
has placed this controversy in the context of Missouri state politics
and has provided insight into how propositions become law. Importantly,
Horner has shown the influence of lobbying in the legislative process,
analyzing with care the role of the NRA in fighting for
conceal-and-carry and the role of those groups who opposed
Laws.”—Lawrence O. Christensen
When the
Missouri state legislature overrode Governor Bob Holden’s veto in 2003
to make conceal-and-carry the law of the land, the Show-Me State became
one of the last in the country to adopt this type of law. In fact, it
took years of concerted effort on the part of pro-gun advocates to make
this a reality. In Showdown in the Show-Me State, William Horner
chronicles this complex and fascinating fight in clear, chronological
order beginning with the first bill introduced into the Missouri General
Assembly in 1992 and ending with the state supreme court’s decision in
2004 that Missouri’s constitution permitted the legislature to grant
Missourians the right to carry concealed weapons.
There is,
it is often argued, no state more typically “American” than Missouri.
The state is closely divided along partisan lines, as is the nation as a
whole, and in the previous century, Missouri voters have regularly
chosen the winner in almost every presidential election. By offering an
examination of guns and gun policy in Missouri, this book provides a
glimpse into the hearts and minds of Missourians and, by extension, of
mainstream America as well. Horner’s in-depth case study details the
give-and-take among legislators and examines the role that interest
groups played in the evolution of this divisive issue.
Horner’s
book—part policy analysis, part interest group study, and part
history—will appeal to readers with an interest in the issue of gun
control or in the political process, and it will provide a thorough
resource for those who study policy making at the state level.
About the Author
William T.
Horner is Visiting Assistant Professor of Political Science at the
University of Missouri–Columbia.
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