Skip to main content
Home
  • Collections
  • Browse
  • Services
  • Subscribe
  • How to
  • About
  • My APO
  • Log in
  • Add a resource

Sort by

  • Relevancesort ascending
  • Date published

Filter by resource type:

  • Essay (1) Apply Essay filter

Filter by date published:

  • August 2006 (1) Apply August 2006 filter

Filter by apo collection(s):

  • Pacific Research (1) Apply Pacific Research filter

Filter by broad subject area(s):

  • (-) Remove Social issues filter Social issues
  • Health (1) Apply Health filter
  • Justice (1) Apply Justice filter

Filter by subject(s):

  • armed violence (1) Apply armed violence filter
  • Assault and battery (1) Apply Assault and battery filter
  • Crime (1) Apply Crime filter
  • Firearms (1) Apply Firearms filter
  • Gun control (1) Apply Gun control filter
  • gun crimes (1) Apply gun crimes filter

Filter by geographic coverage:

  • (-) Remove Australia filter Australia
  • (-) Remove Papua New Guinea filter Papua New Guinea

Filter by author/creator:

  • Philip Alpers (1) Apply Philip Alpers filter

Filter by publisher/producer:

  • Nautilus Institute for Security and Sustainability (1) Apply Nautilus Institute for Security and Sustainability filter

Filter by journal name:

Filter by content type:

  • Resource (1) Apply Resource filter

Filter by party type:

Filter by content association:

  • (-) Remove RMIT University filter RMIT University
  • GunPolicy.org (1) Apply GunPolicy.org filter
  • University of Sydney (1) Apply University of Sydney filter

› Social issues › Papua New Guinea › RMIT University › Australia

Video

The search found 1 result in 0.17 seconds.

Search results

    Essay

    Australian government assault rifle now a common crime gun in Papua New Guinea
    8 Aug 2006
    3
    Philip Alpers
    Nautilus Institute for Security and Sustainability

    The Australian SLR remains the experienced criminal's assault weapon of choice writes Philip Alpers. Of the 7,664 M-16 and SLR assault rifles delivered to the PNG Defence Force since 1971, only 2,013 (26 per cent) remain in stock. Now, Australia faces the near-inevitability of its...

Discover

  • Collections
  • Browse
  • Events
  • Jobs
  • Courses
  • Calls & Notices
  • Monthly Archive

Services

  • Subscribe
  • Add a resource
  • Advertise
  • Curated Content

Collaborate

  • Contact Us
  • APO Blog
  • Major Projects
  • Privacy Policy

Connect

 


© 2019 Analysis & Policy Observatory (APO), licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non-Commercial 3.0 Australia (CC-BY-NC 3.0 AU) License