A recent study unveils alarming racial disparities in gun violence exposure among Chicago residents, with more than half of Black and Hispanic individuals witnessing a shooting by age 40. In contrast, only about 26% of white individuals report the same experience, revealing a significant divide in trauma and safety across racial lines.
The research, conducted by esteemed institutions like Harvard and the University of Cambridge, tracked over 2,400 residents born from the early 1980s to mid-1990s. It found that Black and Hispanic participants face disproportionately higher rates of gun violence near their homes, with Black individuals encountering shootings within a block at rates over 12 times higher than white counterparts. As Chicago prepares for a new mayor amid ongoing discussions of public safety, these findings raise critical questions about community health and the long-term impacts of handgun violence on marginalized populations.
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