Gun violence continues to represent one of the gravest global public health emergencies of our time. Astonishingly, up to 71 percent of homicides worldwide involve firearms, a statistic that underscores the ubiquitous threat posed by guns across diverse societies. While mass shootings and a pervasive gun culture often dominate discourse in the United States, the brunt of firearm-related homicides disproportionately impacts low- and middle-income countries, especially in Latin America and the Caribbean. This reality challenges common perceptions and calls for a broadened research agenda capable of addressing the global dimensions of gun violence.
Comprehensive understanding of the multifactorial risk factors contributing to firearm violence, alongside the development and implementation of evidence-based policies, is critically needed to reverse this alarming trend. However, researchers face substantial obstacles in accessing reliable data, formulating effective interventions, and advocating for consistent international collaboration. A recent commentary published in the esteemed journal The Lancet brings these challenges into stark relief, highlighting systemic hurdles in investigating and mitigating gun violence globally.
Foremost among the impediments confronting gun violence researchers is the pervasive lack of access to high-quality, comprehensive data. In many countries, firearm-related violence data are shrouded in secrecy, often classified as matters of national security. Mexico serves as a salient example, where governmental agencies withhold detailed investigation results and statistical repositories follow erratic release schedules, limiting transparency and stymieing empirical inquiry. The scarcity of standardized, timely, and accessible data hampers the development of robust analytical frameworks essential for understanding trends and causal mechanisms underlying firearm violence.
Compounding the issue, legislative and political actions have increasingly obstructed gun violence research. Certain governments have enacted policies that explicitly restrict dissemination of firearm data or cut funding streams supporting academic and institutional research initiatives. These restrictive measures are frequently shaped by complex geopolitical and economic considerations, wherein strategic interests overshadow public health imperatives. A poignant illustration includes the 2025 dismissal of over 200 key personnel from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Injury Center, a move that significantly curtailed federal expertise dedicated to injuries caused by firearms and weakened national research infrastructure.
Another dimension complicating research efforts is the World Health Organization’s evolving stance towards firearm violence. Since 2014, the WHO has progressively integrated firearm violence within broader homicide frameworks rather than treating it as a discrete public health challenge. This paradigm shift, though perhaps motivated by institutional streamlining, risks diluting the specificity and targeted policy strategies required to address the unique dynamics of gun violence. Fragmenting focus in this manner may impair the international community’s capacity to deploy focused interventions necessary for curbing firearm-related morbidity and mortality.
The commentary underscores that tackling these multifaceted obstacles demands innovative and interdisciplinary collaboration. Synergistic alliances between academic institutions, investigative journalists, civil society organizations, and advocacy groups can harness diverse perspectives and resources, facilitating more comprehensive data gathering and fostering trust among stakeholders. Such cross-sectoral engagements not only bolster transparency but also enhance the translation of scientific evidence into actionable policies and community-level mobilization efforts.
Moreover, facilitating knowledge exchange requires establishing global consortia that integrate expertise across domains including public health, economics, law, medicine, history, and political science. The Lancet Commission on Global Gun Violence and Health, inaugurated in 2024 with co-chairs Drs. Adnan Hyder and Lorena Barberia, exemplifies this approach. This commission represents a pioneering effort to create a sustained, multidisciplinary platform aimed at generating new insights and advancing evidence-based solutions to the global gun violence crisis.
Innovative conceptual frameworks emerging from this commission and similar initiatives advocate for convergent thinking—melding diverse academic disciplines and practical fields to explore multisectoral, context-sensitive interventions. These new paradigms acknowledge the intricate interplay between socio-political determinants, cultural norms, economic disparities, and access to firearms. By illuminating these relationships, researchers can propose tailored strategies that transcend one-size-fits-all policies and resonate more deeply within the affected communities.
Notably, an urgent imperative exists to expand research endeavors in low- and middle-income countries, where the disproportionate firearm violence burden persists but scholarly attention and funding remain insufficient. The current corpus of research from these regions is markedly limited, constrained by resource constraints, political resistance, and infrastructural deficits. Prioritizing capacity building and fostering equitable partnerships with local institutions are essential steps towards creating research ecosystems that empower domestic expertise and amplify regional voices.
Crucially, this global emphasis on firearm violence should not be interpreted as diminishing attention to issues faced by high-income countries, including the United States, which continues to grapple with profound challenges related to gun culture and mass shootings. Instead, it calls for a more holistic, globally informed perspective that recognizes shared vulnerabilities and opportunities for mutual learning. Addressing firearm violence thus necessitates both localized interventions and coordinated international strategies that respect national contexts while fostering global solidarity.
Beyond academic and policy circles, increasing public awareness of the complexity and scale of the gun violence epidemic is vital. Effective communication strategies that disseminate research findings in accessible, compelling ways can galvanize communities, policymakers, and funding bodies alike. Mobilizing public support will enhance political will, mitigate stigma, and generate sustained momentum for the structural changes imperative to reduce firearm-related harm worldwide.
In sum, the pervasive and complex nature of gun violence demands a paradigm shift in research methodologies and collaborative efforts. Overcoming obstructions related to data accessibility, political interference, and institutional realignments requires determination, creativity, and inclusivity. The establishment of comprehensive consortia and multidisciplinary commissions offers promising avenues, but success hinges on global commitment to transparency, equity, and sustained investment. Only by embracing such integrative approaches can the international community hope to devise effective remedies for a crisis that transcends borders and continues to claim lives across the globe.
Subject of Research: Not applicable
Article Title: Global challenges for research on gun violence
News Publication Date: April 1, 2026
Web References:
- Amnesty International, Gun Violence Overview: https://www.amnesty.org/en/what-we-do/arms-control/gun-violence/
- NIH PMC Article on Gun-Related Homicides: https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC12535839/
- The Lancet Commentary: https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(26)00361-2/abstract
References:
Hyder, A., Ley, S., Barberia, L., & Jafri, A. (2026). Global challenges for research on gun violence. The Lancet. DOI: 10.1016/S0140-6736(26)00361-2
Keywords: Gun violence, firearm violence, public health, global health, data transparency, gun policy, international collaboration, injury prevention, multidisciplinary research, Lancet Commission

