Trade Update 2019: Transfers, Transparency, and South-east Asia Spotlight

Submitted by Lionel Kosirnik on 9 December, 2020

Authorized small arms imports to South-east Asia were worth at least USD 443 million in 2016, a 48 per cent increase from 2015, as revealed by the Small Arms Survey’s Trade Update 2019: Transfers, Transparency, and South-east Asia SpotlightThis increase, combined with the diversification in their small arms trading partners, highlights the region’s growing significance for international small arms flows.

Trade Update 2018: Sub-Saharan Africa in Focus

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on 24 November, 2020

The 2018 edition of the Small Arms Survey’s Trade Update—analyzing the small arms authorized trade in 2015—finds that the global authorized small arms trade was worth at least USD 5.7 billion in 2015, with small arms ammunition exports valued at USD 2.3 billion. The total value represents a seven per cent decrease between 2014 and 2015, mostly due to a USD 198 million decline in exports by top exporting countries the United States, Brazil, and Italy.  

Beyond State Control: Improvised and Craft-produced Small Arms and Light Weapons

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on 24 November, 2020

Although the number of craft-produced small arms and light weapons is difficult to estimate, they are prevalent and range broadly in sophistication and quality.

Improvised and craft-produced firearms remain an important source of firepower for a wide range of actors, including tribal groups, poachers, criminals, insurgent groups, and even some states and quasi-state groups. In various locations, these weapons account for most of the firearms used in crime; in others, their production is institutionalized, providing essential income for local gunsmiths.

Global Development and Production of Self-loading Service Rifles: 1896 to the Present (Working Paper 25)

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on 24 November, 2020

Self-loading rifles were first issued in military service in 1896 and remain the primary infantry weapon for all modern military forces. They are durable weapons, with examples produced in the 1930s and 1940s still documented in modern conflict zones. Recent research suggests that some 175 million self-loading service rifles have been produced to date. This figure does not include civilian-owned rifles and is very likely an underestimate. 

Behind the Curve: New Technologies, New Control Challenges (Occasional Paper 32)

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on 24 November, 2020

Behind the Curve: New Technologies, New Control Challenges, an Occasional Paper from the Small Arms Survey, looks at three recent developments in small arms manufacturing, technology, and design—polymer frames, modular weapons, and 3D printing—as well as the use of new technologies for improved small arms control.

Translated into Arabic by the EU-LAS project.

Producers of Small Arms, Light Weapons, and Their Ammunition (Research Note 43)

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on 24 November, 2020

Rifles, including assault rifles, have constituted the bulk of military small arms production in the 20th and 21st centuries, and are manufactured widely throughout the world.

There are thousands of companies, from some 100 countries, that produce small arms, light weapons, and their ammunition.

The US Firearms Industry: Production and Supply (Working Paper 14)

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on 24 November, 2020

During the 25-year period from 1986 to 2010, US-based firearms manufacturers produced over 98 million pistols, revolvers, rifles, and shotguns for domestic sale (excluding those produced for export).

The US Firearms Industry: Production and Supply analyses economic aspects of the US firearms industry, specifically the civilian, private security, and law enforcement (i.e. non-military) markets for pistols, revolvers, rifles, and shotguns, providing a focus on supply-side issues.