Most gun control frameworks are based on industrial-era assumptions about centralized factory production. Conventional weapons trafficking presumably entails transfers from legal supplies to illicit markets and users. However, there is speculation that post-industrial technologic conditions will contribute to a rise in illegally-fabricated do-it-yourself (DIY) small arms. This may widen illegal procurement repertoires, transforming weapons trafficking into an issue of production as well as transfer. Industrial-era weapons control is not structured to combat decentralized illicit production. Using mixed qualitative methods, this research identifies conditions conducive to illegal DIY activity. It then evaluates DIY\u27s security implicat...