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US news has felt like a whirlwind for the past two weeks, but today senior correspondent Marin Cogan is here with some actually good news about America: Violent crime is dropping rapidly from its pandemic-era peaks. But why did it get so high in the first place? (Also: I'll be out for the next two weeks, you'll be in the hands of my colleague Sean Collins â enjoy!)
âCaroline Houck, senior editor of news [New York City Police Department (NYPD) officers investigate the scene where a women was shot and killed in the Brooklyn borough of New York, U.S., on Wednesday, August 4, 2021] Getty Images Why the US had a violent crime spike during Covid and other countries didnât Itâs not every day that you see officials touting crime trends just as summer begins. Summer is typically when [violent crime increases](, and no one wants to celebrate a win before half-timeâs over. This year has been different. In June, [the FBI released preliminary quarterly data]( for January to March 2024 that shows violent crime rates continuing to decline from their pandemic peaks. In the first months of this year, the data suggest that violent crime fell by 15 percent, with murder falling by more than 26 percent, compared to the same period in 2023. âViolent crime is dropping at record levels in America,â President Joe Biden [said]( in a statement trumpeting the FBIâs estimates. âAmericans are safer today than when I took office.â Itâs always worth approaching [preliminary crime data with caution](, especially this early. But the FBIâs report broadly fits with last year, when the government recorded a [13 percent decrease in murders]( â likely âone of the fastest rates of decline ever recordedâ according to crime stats [analyst Jeff Asher](. The Biden administration has â despite what Donald Trump says â prioritized crime reduction. The government [sent billions of dollars]( to cities and states as part of the American Rescue Plan and [urged them to spend it]( on crime fighting and prevention, including hiring more police officers. He also championed the [Bipartisan Safer Communities Act](, which created real investments in community violence intervention and [paved the way]( for the most significant expansion of background checks in decades. Whether heâll get credit for it with voters is another question. Decades worth of polling shows that Americans tend to believe crime is increasing, [even when itâs not](. But there might be another reason why Americans are slow to pick up on the good news: Theyâre still shaken by the genuinely worrisome rise in homicide in 2020. The murder rate didnât reach the highs it did in the [1970s through the early 1990s,]( but the fact that it [jumped 30 percent]( in 2020 was a real cause for concern. Now that violent crime is falling, though, itâs worth looking back at what happened. Was the rise in murders in the United States part of a broader trend, or something more anomalous? [guns laid out] Jim Watson/AFP via Getty Images A uniquely American problem A few years out from the start of the pandemic, it does appear that the rise in homicides in the United States was unique. According to multiple studies and [a systematic review of crime data]( for 2020, in most countries crime fell following Covid-19 lockdowns, then gradually returned to their pre-pandemic levels once the lockdown measures lifted. Homicide was the exception to the rule â but not the way it was in the United States. Homicides around the world, [according to the 46 studies the authors reviewed](, didnât change significantly due to the pandemic. âMost studies reported no relationship between Covid-19 and homicides,â the authors of the study wrote. A majority of the studies, they noted, found no relationship between the implementation or easing of lockdown measures and killings. The [Small Arms Survey](, which gathers and analyzes data about firearms ownership and violence across the world, also found that the global rate of violent deaths [decreased worldwide]( in 2020. What was different in the United States? [Handguns laid out] Scott Barbour/Getty Images âThere was no other country that experienced this kind of sudden increase in gun violence,â says Patrick Sharkey, [a sociologist at Princeton University]( who studies the intersections of urban segregation, economic inequality, and violence. It was [gun violence, specifically](, that sent violent crime soaring. Americans bought guns [in record numbers]( during the pandemic, and according to [an analysis by Rob Arthur and Asher for Vox](, thereâs evidence that more people were carrying guns in 2020 â even before crime soared that summer. âGuns don't necessarily create violence on their own, but they make violence more lethal,â Sharkey says. âThere was no other country that experienced this kind of sudden increase in gun violence,â says Patrick Sharkey, [a sociologist at Princeton University]( who studies the intersections of urban segregation, economic inequality, and violence. It was [gun violence, specifically](, that sent violent crime soaring. Americans bought guns [in record numbers]( during the pandemic, and according to [an analysis by Rob Arthur and Asher for Vox](, thereâs evidence that more people were carrying guns in 2020 â even before crime soared that summer. âGuns don't necessarily create violence on their own, but they make violence more lethal,â Sharkey says. While experts caution that itâs difficult to definitively prove what caused the rise in violent crime, there are a few other factors that likely contributed to it. One was the killing of George Floyd by police and the unrest surrounding it, accompanied by a withdrawal in policing that followed. Previous [research has shown]( that high-profile incidents of police violence correspond with a pullback by police and a rise in crime â specifically, robberies and murders. Data following the unrest after Floydâs killing [in Minneapolis]( [and elsewhere]( [shows]( a marked decline in policing and arrests that summer. âThere was a core shift in our understanding of policing in the United States,â Sharkey says. Millions took to the streets to demand an end to police brutality; long-standing cultural assumptions about the authority and legitimacy of police to maintain public safety by any means necessary were called into question. âThat understanding of whoâs in charge of public space broke down in a major way,â he says. âWhat we know is that when people retreat from public space and shelter in their homes it creates this vacuum where public spaces can carry the threat of violence.â Violent crime is now falling in the U.S., with several cities showing big declines in homicide and violent crime. That might be in part because the most disruptive phase of the pandemic has passed, but Sharkey thinks that the federal funding provided to cities aimed at public safety [made a real difference](. âI think the federal funding is probably the best explanation for why the surge in violence didnât persist and why it has fallen so substantially over the past couple of years. Itâs probably a factor that doesn't get the recognition it deserves.â Still, some of the factors that drove the surge â the preponderance of so many guns and the periodic incidents of deadly [police violence]( â endure. And because of that, experts say that the violence from that period shouldnât be dismissed as a one-time event, but should be studied to see how to prevent violence in the future. Even as crime continues to fall, some of the conditions that helped create the rise in violent crime are still with us. â[Marin Cogan, senior correspondent]( [Listen]( How to steal a team The Oakland A's are being moved to Las Vegas. Can the team's fans in the East Bay do anything about it? [Listen now]( AROUND THE WORLD - After the Toriesâ defeat, whatâs next for the UK?: How the Labour Party will govern, explained. [[Vox](]
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- Season three of The Bear leaves something to be desired: Including, even, its signature relationship with food. [[Vox](] Ad Embracing economic chaos Can a physicist predict our messy economy by building an enormous simulation of the entire world? [Listen now]( Are you enjoying the Today, Explained newsletter? Forward it to a friend; they can [sign up for it right here](. And as always, we want to know what you think. Specifically: If there is a topic you want us to explain or a story youâre curious to learn more about, let us know [by filling out this form]( or just replying to this email. Today's edition was produced and edited by Caroline Houck. We'll see you tomorrow! [Become a Vox Member]( Support our journalism â become a Vox Member and youâll get exclusive access to the newsroom with members-only perks including newsletters, bonus podcasts and videos, and more. [Join our community]( Ad [Facebook]( [Twitter]( [YouTube]( [Instagram]( [TikTok]( [WhatsApp]( This email was sent to {EMAIL}. Manage your [email preferences]( [unsubscribe](param=sentences). If you value Voxâs unique explanatory journalism, support our work with a one-time or recurring [contribution](. View our [Privacy Notice]( and our [Terms of Service](. Vox Media, 1701 Rhode Island. NW, Washington, DC 20036.
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