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Abstract

To explain the genesis of mass murder committed by students at their schools, the authors propose a five-stage sequential model in which several criminological theories (strain theory, control theory, and routine activities theory) are brought to bear collectively to demonstrate their cumulative effect. These stages are as follows: chronic strain, uncontrolled strain, acute strain, the planning stage, and the massacre. Long-term frustrations (chronic strains) experienced early in life or in adolescence lead to social isolation, and the resultant lack of prosocial support systems (uncontrolled strain) in turn allows a short-term negative event (acute strain), be it real or imagined, to be particularly devastating. As such, the acute strain initiates a planning stage, wherein a mass killing is fantasized about as a masculine solution to regain lost feelings of control, and actions are taken to ensure the fantasy can become reality. The planning process concludes in a massacre facilitated by weapons that enable mass destruction in schoolrooms and campuses, where students are closely packed together. Based on this analysis, prevention strategies are suggested.
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American Behavioral Scientist
DOI: 10.1177/0002764209332543
2009; 52; 1227 American Behavioral Scientist
Jack Levin and Eric Madfis
Mass Murder at School and Cumulative Strain: A Sequential Model
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1227
American Behavioral Scientist
Volume 52 Number 9
May 2009 1227-1245
© 2009 SAGE Publications
10.1177/0002764209332543
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Mass Murder at School
and Cumulative Strain
A Sequential Model
Jack Levin
Eric Madfis
1
Northeastern University
To explain the genesis of mass murder committed by students at their schools, the
authors propose a five-stage sequential model in which several criminological theories
(strain theory, control theory, and routine activities theory) are brought to bear collec-
tively to demonstrate their cumulative effect. These stages are as follows: chronic
strain, uncontrolled strain, acute strain, the planning stage, and the massacre. Long-
term frustrations (chronic strains) experienced early in life or in adolescence lead to
social isolation, and the resultant lack of prosocial support systems (uncontrolled
strain) in turn allows a short-term negative event (acute strain), be it real or imagined,
to be particularly devastating. As such, the acute strain initiates a planning stage,
wherein a mass killing is fantasized about as a masculine solution to regain lost feelings
of control, and actions are taken to ensure the fantasy can become reality. The planning
process concludes in a massacre facilitated by weapons that enable mass destruction in
schoolrooms and campuses, where students are closely packed together. Based on this
analysis, prevention strategies are suggested.
Keywords: school shootings; violence; mass murder; strain; homicide
A
s it has come to be known in the contemporary literature on criminal homicide
(such as Duwe, 2007; Fox & Levin, 2005; Holmes & Holmes, 2001), a mass
murder refers to the antisocial and non-state-sponsored killing of multiple victims
during a single episode at one or more closely related locations. Prior to the mid-
1990s, social scientists who sought to understand mass murder tended to focus on
episodes in workplaces, families, and public places, such as shopping malls and
restaurants (see, for example, Dietz, 1986; Levin & Fox, 1985). In the mid- and late
1990s, a string of shootings occurred, often resulting in multiple injuries and homi-
cides, at middle and high schools located in obscure, out-of-the-way suburban and
rural communities, such as Pearl, Mississippi; Jonesboro, Arkansas; Springfield,
Oregon; and most famously, Littleton, Colorado. As a result of such shootings in
schools throughout the United States, a growing number of specialists (Fox & Levin,
2005; Kimmel & Mahler, 2003; Newman et al., 2004; Vossekuil, Fein, Reddy,
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1228 American Behavioral Scientist
Borum, & Modzeleski, 2004) turned their attention to the school massacre in search
of an explanation for these perplexing events. Roughly a decade after the substantial
spike in the middle and high school massacres of the ’90s, we have seen this disturb-
ing phenomenon anew on American college campuses, such as Virginia Tech,
Louisiana Technical College, and Northern Illinois University (Fox & Savage,
2009).
Although the recent college campus massacres will surely result in myriad
descriptive case studies and other empirical research (see Agger & Luke, 2008, for
example), as was the case post-Columbine (see Larkin, 2007; Newman et al., 2004),
the study of the school massacre as a phenomenon has far too frequently been dis-
connected from two terribly relevant ongoing conversations in the literature. First,
few scholars researching school shootings have borrowed sufficiently from the exist-
ing literature on the larger phenomenon of mass murder. Second, research on school
shootings has often lacked theoretical analysis and has been particularly discon-
nected from the ongoing debates in criminological theory.
In this article, we seek to remedy these two deficits by a careful comparison between
school mass murders and those mass murders perpetrated at other locations (such as at
work, in the home, or in public places) and by the introduction of a sequential and cumu-
lative theoretical model suggesting the etiology of school massacres committed by stu-
dents against their classmates and teachers. By explaining the sequence of events
preceding the multiple school shootings, our analysis focuses on the accumulation of
factors that ultimately lead to a slaughter as well as on the accumulation of factors that
might have prevented the shooting from occurring in the first place.
Our approach is meant to move beyond (or, at least, to the side of) the framework of
a monolithic explanation and toward an amalgam of mesolevel theories. Although the
numerous empirical studies (see, for example, Sherman & Burke, 1984) that engage in
theory testing and that pit theories against one another are certainly of merit in the body
of knowledge we have regarding human behavior, not all theories of crime are mutually
exclusive and in direct opposition. In fact, both integrated theories of crime (such as
Elliott, Ageton, & Cantor, 1979; Tittle, 1995) and theoretical formulations that stress the
additive impact of a sequence of events (notable examples include Athens, 1992; Linsky
& Straus, 1986; Smelser, 1962) have a respectable if not lengthy history. In this vein, we
intend to stress the etiological significance of multiple problematic situations, stressors,
and criminal opportunities that ultimately produce an important cumulative effect in
people’s lives. Newman et al. (2004, p. 229) are notable for suggesting a “combination
of factors” pertaining to school shootings, yet this work is not based in theory, nor is it
explicitly sequential and cumulative.
For the purpose of providing a broad and comprehensive view of the factors fre-
quently implicated in rampages committed by students, we used and combined
various existing criminological theories. This analysis excludes the episodes in
which outsiders, often much older adults who lack any direct connection with the
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Levin, Madfis / Mass Murder at School and Cumulative Strain 1229
school, invade a school building with the intention of amassing a large body count.
For the purpose of maintaining relative uniformity of motivation, our analysis
includes only those perpetrators who themselves, at the time of the attack, were
enrolled in or were recently withdrawn from the middle school, high school, or col-
lege that they targeted. Similarly, we seek to generalize not to all incidents of school
shootings but, following Newman (2004), only to school massacres, cases in which
multiple human targets were killed or injured on school property by a student or
recent former student of the targeted school, where three or more victims were killed
or injured. Our criteria for selection would then exclude the large number of school
shooting cases with single victims (Hagan, Hirschfield, & Shedd, 2002) as well as
double murders in which particular individuals, and no other students or teachers,
were targeted, for example, in the case of domestic violence.
To assist in this theoretical exploration, various cases of school massacres com-
mitted by enrolled students were directly compared and contrasted to various other
forms of mass murder (such as family annihilations, workplace massacres, etc.).
This connection is important because, as previously mentioned, the existing litera-
ture on school shootings has often neglected to situate these horrendous occurrences
as one particular subset of the mass murder phenomenon.
Our model consists of five distinct stages, each of which is hypothesized as a
necessary condition for the school massacre to take place. The term cumulative
strain has been used to emphasize the crucial point that these factors intersect and
build on one another in a cumulative fashion. None of these variables at any given
stage is viewed, by itself, as causing a school massacre to occur.
Stage 1: Chronic Strain
Sociologists and criminologists alike have long asserted that strains, various life
pressures and difficulties, may result in criminal behavior. In 1938, Robert K.
Merton adapted Durkheim’s anomie theory to argue that those who are structurally
barricaded from achieving the cultural goal of material success experience strain and
may ultimately adapt to this disappointing situation with various forms of deviant
and criminal behavior. Likewise, social psychologists have long argued that chronic
frustration, a string of failures to achieve an individual’s objectives, increases the
likelihood of anger and aggressive behavior (Dollard, Doob, Miller, Mowrer, &
Sears, 1939). In an early study, Palmer (1960) found that convicted murderers had
suffered a number of important frustrations throughout childhood—physical defects,
poor academic performance, few friends, and chronic illnesses—in comparison to
their brothers who had never been convicted of committing a homicide.
Moving the concept of strain beyond Merton’s (1938, 1968) social structural and
class concerns and beyond Dollard et al.s (1939) notion of failed objectives,
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1230 American Behavioral Scientist
Agnew’s (1992) general strain theory broadened the concept of strain to include a
range of negative experiences or disappointing events in social relationships at
home, school, or work or in the neighborhood. In Agnew’s theory, strain is regarded
as a range of difficulties that lead to anger, frustration, disappointment, depression,
fear, and ultimately, crime.
When strain intensifies and persists across a lengthy period of time, it becomes
chronic. Adults who go on a rampage at work or in the family are typically victimized
by one or more sources of chronic strain. Workplace avengers, those who open fire on
their boss and coworkers simultaneously, have typically gone from job to job or have
never achieved the promotions and raises to which they feel entitled. They are typically
middle-aged men who feel like failures at the very stage of life when they believe they
should be achieving occupational success. Chronically depressed and hopeless, those
who go on a rampage at the office believe that their hard work has gone unappreciated
and that their contributions to the company are being ignored (Fox & Levin, 1994a).
Similarly, family annihilators, those who take the lives of their spouse and chil-
dren, suffer from long-standing strains, usually in the form of severe family conflicts
as well as financial difficulties during a period of time (see Fox & Levin, 2005).
These killers, most frequently the male head of the household (Duwe, 2004;
Gosselin, 2000), commit “familicide” to restore control of the fate of their family,
although this is done with one of two distinct motives in mind. Some, on one hand,
seek “sweet revenge” against a spouse, whom they blame for all of their personal
miseries, as well as the children the spouse loves. Others, however, view their act of
family annihilation as altruistic, because they perceive some impending difficulty
(be it personal or financial) as catastrophic and ultimately a fate worse than death for
their loved ones (Holmes & Holmes, 2001; Palermo & Ross, 1999).
Not unlike the situation of those who commit family annihilations and workplace
massacres, chronic strain seems to be a persistent theme in the life experiences of stu-
dents who kill their schoolmates and teachers en masse (see, for example, Fox & Levin,
2005; Newman et al., 2004; Vossekuil et al., 2004). For school shooters, stressful and
frustrating conditions often characterize their home life, their school relationships, or
both. Research has confirmed the role-played by strain and frustration in the family and
at school in the development of delinquent behavior more generally (Agnew, Brezina,
Wright, & Cullin, 2002; Agnew & White, 1992). Furthermore, Leary, Kowalski, Smith,
and Phillips (2003) found that chronic rejection of the shooters was present in at least 13
of the 15 school shooting cases they examined.
Many school shooters had experienced chronic strain for years at home and were
quite hostile toward their parents and other members of their family. For example,
school shooter Kip Kinkel murdered both of his parents on the day before perpetrat-
ing his school massacre (Mendoza, 2002). Likewise, Luke Woodham of Pearl,
Mississippi, beat and stabbed his mother to death on the day of his rampage
(Mendoza, 2002). Although Kimmel and Mahler (2003, p. 1442) found that “almost
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Levin, Madfis / Mass Murder at School and Cumulative Strain 1231
all the shooters came from intact and relatively stable families, with no history of
child abuse,” such parricide is more than likely indicative of a less than ideal family
dynamic—one in which such family problems are not directly visible via traditional
measures. As Newman et al. (2004, p. 245) argued, family structure and living
arrangements are no measure of the quality of family life, and in fact, this study
found that almost half of its school shooter sample came from homes wrought with
conflict.
Among the sources of strain identified by Agnew (1992) are the failure to achieve
positively valued goals and the disjunction of expectations and achievements. Both
of these sources are similar to, though broader in scope than, Merton’s (1938, 1968)
analysis of the disparity between cultural goals and structural means. Middle and
high school students often judge their success and value in life neither by grade point
averages (as Merton’s singular material goal model would suggest) nor by family
relationships but rather in terms of their popularity with peers. Youths who have gone
on a rampage have been both academic successes and failures (Hermann & Finn,
2002; Vossekuil et al., 2004), but quite possibly all of them had been physically bul-
lied, teased, humiliated, or ignored by their fellow schoolmates on a regular basis
(Kimmel & Mahler, 2003; Larkin 2007; Newman et al., 2004; Vossekuil et al.,
2004). For example, Charles Andy” Williams, who killed 2 students and injured
another 13 at his high school in 2001, was beaten up and harassed constantly by his
peers (Kimmel & Mahler, 2003).
Kimmel and Maher (2003) stressed the fact that many of the bullied students who
went on a rampage were boys (all of the shooters from their 1982-to-2001 sample
were male).
2
These sociologists argued that the tormenters attacked their victims’
masculinity or manhood in profoundly important ways. The vast majority of the
shooters were not in fact homosexual,
3
yet many of them feared being misperceived
as gay or as having gay tendencies and thus as having failed in their manhood. They
were “different from the other boys—shy, bookish, honor students, artistic, musical,
theatrical, nonathletic, ‘geekish, or weird” (Kimmel & Maher, 2003, p. 1445).
Dylan Klebold, one of Columbine’s killer duo, was constantly pushed into lockers,
grabbed in the corridors and cafeteria, and harassed with homophobic slurs (Larkin,
2007). School shooter Luke Woodham of Pearl, Mississippi, was similarly taunted
as being “gay” or “a fag,” and 14-year-old Michael Carneal, who shot to death three
classmates in his West Paducah, Kentucky, high school, was devastated when fellow
students referred to him as a “faggot” (Kimmel & Mahler, 2003). In many cases,
gay-baiting, bullying, and other forms of harassment by peers were persistent
themes. These troubling peer relationships at school, or their familial equivalent at
home, constituted serious and chronic strains for many of the school shooters.
Although a necessary contributing factor, persistent strain by itself is hardly enough
to push any individual into a multiple-victim spree of violence. Workplace strains
(because of diminished job security, downward mobility, and a growing level of income
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1232 American Behavioral Scientist
inequality since the 1970s) have become more widespread (Blau, 1999; Bluestone &
Harrison, 1982; Rifkin, 1995). Accordingly, millions of employees never achieve the
economic success to which they feel entitled, yet they never kill anyone. Instead, they
continue to conform to conventional standards and remain loyal employees, hoping that
they will be rewarded for working hard and contributing to the success of the company.
Or they become ritualistic, in the Mertonian sense, by giving up on ever achieving eco-
nomic success but continuing to go through the motions.
Countless couples endure long-standing conflicts with their partners. They argue,
confront one another, and even become physically abusive. Although frustrated,
depressed, and angry, relatively few partners actually kill anyone, let alone multiple
members of their own families. Instead, they adjust to a continuing family climate
of tension and conflict, or they separate and then move on to another relationship.
In the same way, numerous teenagers and young adults in schools and colleges
across the country maintain less-than-ideal relationships with their peers and family
members. They may hate school and feel like outsiders in their classrooms or on the
playground, but they endure the negative experiences until graduation (or until they
drop out) and then move on with their lives. Many young people experience family
discord or even outright abuse and neglect yet never turn to the most extreme forms
of violence. Thus, there is more to the story than just chronic strain.
Stage 2: Uncontrolled Strain
In most cases, the strains of everyday life are contained by the presence of con-
ventional and prosocial relationships. From the point of view of middle-class society
(from which a majority of school shooters have come), most youngsters are embed-
ded in a protective network with mainstream support systems in place. If they cannot
find acceptance at school, they locate it in the family. Or, perhaps, they move to
another set of peers outside the realm of their school.
Some students, however, either never develop any meaningful social relationships
at all (such as Virginia Tech shooter Seung-Hui Cho) or turn to marginalized students
who are willing, even eager, to support and encourage their violent antisocial feel-
ings and beliefs (such as the killer duos responsible for the massacres at Columbine,
Colorado, and Jonesboro, Arkansas). In a recent study, Agnew et al. (2000) deter-
mined that juveniles lacking in social constraint, as measured by little attachment to
parents or school and/or the presence of troublesome friends, are more likely to react
to strain by engaging in delinquent behavior generally.
In his social control theory, Hirschi (1969) argued that commitment to conven-
tional institutions and bonding relationships with conventional people immunize
individuals from perpetrating criminal acts, including violence. Such well-connected
individuals have a stake in conformity to mainstream norms and are reluctant to
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Levin, Madfis / Mass Murder at School and Cumulative Strain 1233
jeopardize that stake by engaging in criminal behavior. Those who lack such conven-
tional bonds, by contrast, may feel isolated and/or marginalized and are accordingly
less restricted to conformist behavior. Elliott et al. (1979) modified Hirschi’s control
theory by arguing that delinquency is most likely when both weak bonds to conven-
tional groups and strong bonds to deviant groups are present.
Adults who go on a rampage at work or in the family are almost always socially
isolated and lacking in both conventional and deviant social bonds (Fox & Levin,
2005). By contrast, teenagers who shoot their schoolmates may similarly be without
a vast mainstream social network, but they are also more likely to locate sources of
support and companionship among their peers who experience many of the same
grievances they have. While Vossekuil and his colleagues (2004, p. 20) determined
that 34% of the school shooters they examined were characterized by others or them-
selves as “loners,another 27% of their sample of shooters socialized with students
who were disliked by their peers or were viewed as being part of a “fringe” group,
such as Columbine’s infamous “Trenchcoat Mafia.
4
Furthermore, they found that
44% of shooters were influenced by their peers to engage in the attacks by being
dared or encouraged (Vossekuil et al., 2002, p. 26).
Although strain may persist for decades and family strains often start early in life,
conventional social bonds begin to break down much later. According to Agnew
et al. (2002), adolescents are lower in social control than either adults or children.
That is, teenagers tend to be less attached to their parents, less committed to being
academically successful, and more likely to have friends who get into trouble. This
developmental phase of life known as adolescence is often marked by a profound
desire for independence and rebellion. The peer group becomes almost everything.
Supportive parents may no longer be appreciated by a teenager who is rejected by
his conventional peers and has no friends in the popular crowd. Young adults may
similarly have trouble making the transition into adulthood. Unlike teenagers, they
are now required to fend for themselves. Not every young adult is capable of moving
easily from stage to stage. This is especially true for young people who have expe-
rienced long-standing difficulties throughout their childhood and adolescence.
Because workplace avengers are often socially isolated, they lack the external
controls on their behavior (i.e., social support networks, such as friends and family)
that might prevent them from going over the edge psychologically. Some workplace
mass killers relocate for the sake of a job, leaving behind their family and friends
(perhaps thousands of miles behind). In 1984, 41-year-old James Huberty lost his
job as a welder in his hometown of Canton, Ohio, where he long resided with his
wife, other relatives, and friends. While living in Canton, Huberty experienced
numerous life stressors, even the loss of his cherished job, yet he never killed any-
one. He soon decided that relocating to San Ysidro, a suburb of San Diego,
California, would provide him with better job opportunities. In San Ysidro, Huberty
promptly found employment as a security guard, but he also was very quickly fired.
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1234 American Behavioral Scientist
Now thousands of miles from his family and friends, Huberty lacked affiliations with
the people who might have supported and encouraged him in his time of need. One
week after losing his job, he walked into a local McDonald’s holding a semiauto-
matic rifle and shot to death 21 customers, most of whom were Latino children
(Chester, 1993). Similarly, Harry De La Roche Jr. experienced serious failures, both
socially and academically, during his college experience at the Citadel in Charleston,
South Carolina. After several lonely and friendless months, he left his military
school for good and came home to slaughter both of his parents and his two younger
brothers. Estranged from both his family and peers, De La Roche apparently blamed
his parents for pressuring him to remain in what he regarded as a horrific situation
at the Citadel (Fox & Levin, 2005). If he had received supportive counseling from
close friends or a professional therapist, he might have been able to adjust better to
his school situation or negotiated effectively with his parents. Chances are, De La
Roche would not have resolved his problems through violence.
Some school shooters were similarly isolated. According to his family members,
Seung-Hui Cho—the Virginia Tech shooter—was “quiet,“reserved,and struggling
“to fit in.Cho’s middle and high school classmates described him as “difficult to
know,“in a world of his own,and “dramatically uncommunicative.In his senior
year of high school, neither his name nor his photograph appeared anywhere in the
graduating class yearbook (Cho & Gardner, 2007, p. 1).
Most adult mass killers operate alone when they commit multiple homicide (Fox
& Levin, 2005). Few kill in a team or belong to a subgroup of disgruntled employees
who seek to get even with the boss. By contrast, school shooters sometimes operate
with a partner or belong to a marginal peer group whose members feel alienated
from conventional student culture (Newman et al., 2004; Vossekuil et al., 2004). In
contrast to their adult counterparts who commit mass murder, students who kill often
experience social isolation as a result of a strong sense of community rather than a
weak one. Many school shooters reside in small, tight-knit towns where residents are
in close contact with one another (Kimmel & Mahler, 2003; Newman et al., 2004).
For the individuals who can conform to dominant cultural norms (perhaps about
masculinity in particular) and are accordingly accepted by other residents, it is very
comfortable to live in such a locale. However, for students who are rejected or
ignored, there are few alternative options for peer acceptance. A strong sense of
community may leave them feeling trapped in the only game in town (Levin, 2008;
Newman, 2004). As their resentment grows to an intolerable extent, they may have
only two choices—either to retreat into a world of isolation or to join together with
other students who are similarly rejected or ignored.
Edmunds and Kendrick (1980) suggested that repeated strain may lead to hostility,
particularly, a broad dislike and suspicion of others. Adult mass killers frequently
externalize responsibility for their personal miseries and regard the behavior of others
as highly suspicious (Fox & Levin, 1998). In their way of thinking, the boss refuses
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Levin, Madfis / Mass Murder at School and Cumulative Strain 1235
to give them the raise they deserve; the coworker at the next desk has an unfair advan-
tage with the supervisor; the company wants to terminate them despite all of their good
work. In an effort to reduce the impact of chronic strain and loneliness on his self-
esteem, the bullied or unpopular youngster similarly may begin to deflect responsibil-
ity for failures and exhibit mild paranoia. This is particularly problematic, as isolation
from conventional relationships enhances a youth’s tendency to externalize blame, and
his externalization of blame (which others would negatively perceive as irritability,
pride, and/or even delusional paranoia) further enhances isolation. In the most extreme
cases, uncontrolled strain can become a vicious cycle of despair, isolation, and the
deflection of responsibility.
Numerous young individuals who suffer strain for a long period of time come to be
isolated from conventional sources of encouragement and support and still live long,
law-abiding lives. Many move beyond the isolation and rebellion of adolescence and
eventually increase their social bonds (attachments, commitments, involvements, and
beliefs) to conventional social institutions. In the third sequential stage, however, disaster
strikes (or at least is perceived to strike), and the chronically strained and uncontrolled
individual falls one step deeper into the pit of multiple murder.
Stage 3: Acute Strain
In the vast majority of cases of all forms of mass murder, there is evidence of
acute strain, some loss perceived to be catastrophic in the mind of the killer, which
serves as a catalyst or precipitant. The chronic–acute distinction is akin to that found
in medical nomenclature between chronic and acute illness. Whereas chronic illness
refers to a persistent and long-standing medical condition, acute symptoms develop
rapidly and have a substantially shorter life span. Likewise, whereas chronic strains
are persistent and long-term, acute strains are short-term but particularly troubling
situations or events that seem catastrophic to an already beleaguered, frustrated, and
isolated individual who has lost the ability to cope with adversity.
In the event of a mass killing at work or in the home, the precipitant is usually the
loss of a job; the loss of large amounts of money, as in the stock market; or the loss
of a relationship, as in a nasty separation or divorce or a custody battle (Levin & Fox,
1985; Madfis & Arford, 2008). In 1987, R. Gene Simmons murdered 14 members
of his family at his home in Dover, Arkansas, after hearing about their plans to des-
ert him (Fox & Levin, 2005). In 1999, day trader Mark Barton killed his wife and
two children before shooting to death nine people in two day-trading companies
after losing hundreds of thousands of dollars in a single day (Fox & Levin, 2005).
With school shooters, the catalyst is most often a humiliating loss of face, a rejec-
tion by a girlfriend, a loss of academic standing, an eviction from a community of
peers, or even a major illness (Madfis & Arford, 2008; Vossekuil et al., 2004). High
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1236 American Behavioral Scientist
and middle school students who go on a rampage often suffer some episode by their
peers or romantic interests that leaves them unable to any longer cope with the day-
to-day harassments they have endured. Shooter Kip Kinkel, for example, had
recently been expelled from school and was about to be sent to a program for trou-
bled youths before he engaged in his massacre (Fox, Levin, & Quinet, 2008). Before
his school rampage, Luke Woodham had his heart broken by a girlfriend, an event
he described in his journal as destroying him (Mendoza, 2002).
By contrast, college students who open fire on campus are more likely to have
suffered academically rather than socially (Fox & Savage, 2009). When a massacre
occurs on a college campus, the motivation is frequently more like that involved in
workplace killings. The shooter acts when he fails to graduate or fails to receive
academic acclaim for his achievements. One such case was that of Gang Lu, a phys-
ics PhD recipient at the University of Iowa. In 1991, Gang Lu was in stiff competi-
tion with a fellow graduate student for the prestigious Spriesterbach Dissertation
Prize, which would have ensured him an excellent academic future. After losing the
award, Gang Lu went on a rampage with two firearms, shooting to death five people
on the Iowa City campus, including the three faculty members on his dissertation
committee and the rival physics graduate student who had won the prize he felt he
had deserved. He then took his own life (Chen, 1995).
In adults, an eviction can constitute a catastrophic loss, especially when it threat-
ens to remove the individual from a protected environment. Forty-two-year-old
James Ruppert, for example, shot to death the 11 members of his family after learn-
ing that his mother would no longer allow him to live in her home (Levin & Fox,
1985). On the campus of Virginia Tech, eviction may similarly have served as a
precipitant to a school shooting. Cho was a senior who was due to graduate in a few
weeks. Even for many well-adapted college students, graduation represents a diffi-
cult event; it means being forced to leave campus and fend for one’s self as a full-
fledged adult. For a student like Cho, who was already on the edge psychologically
as the socially isolated victim of long-term bullying and rejection, leaving the
Virginia Tech campus would have been tantamount to being evicted. This singular
foreboding event, certainly not sufficient on its own, was substantial when evaluated
alongside the other explanatory factors found in Cho’s experience. The anticipation
of being forced to leave the campus was, in fact, the final straw.
Recent studies conducted by Meloy and his colleagues (2001; 2004) have indi-
cated that precipitating factors or acute strains may be found more frequently in the
life histories of adult mass murderers than in those of adolescent mass murderers.
These researchers recognized precipitating events in 90% of their 30 cases of adult
mass killers (Meloy et al. 2004: 298) but in only 59% of their 34 adolescent coun-
terparts (Meloy et al. 2001: 722).
A second reason many researchers may miss acute triggers is because they have
been conceptualized incorrectly in the first place. Recent case study research (Madfis
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Levin, Madfis / Mass Murder at School and Cumulative Strain 1237
& Arford, 2008) suggests that the various acute strains involved in school shootings
precipitate a planning stage but not necessarily the massacre itself. Therefore, such
precipitants may exist but not necessarily immediately before a massacre takes place.
Stage 4: The Planning Stage
Acute losses prove catastrophic in part because of the lack of a positive and support-
ive environment and have a cumulative effect because of long-term frustration and
chronic strain. No longer feeling able to cope and feeling as if there is nothing in life left
to lose, the potential shooter is inspired to get even and show the world, even if in only
a few minutes of horrifying bloodshed, that he cannot always be ignored and diminished.
After this point in time, the killer’s mind has been made up to commit a massacre, and
he must spend some time first planning the event to go out, literally and figuratively, with
a “bang.” Subsequent events, and even subsequent strains, may change the timing (likely
speeding it up) and logistics of the plan, but there does seem to be one singular acute
episode that serves as a last straw for the killer, who finally decides on mass murder as a
power-asserting, albeit fatalistic, way out of a terrible situation.
A mass murder is not a simple criminal act to perpetrate. For the killers, a mas-
sacre constitutes the final power-asserting moment of a disastrous and failed exis-
tence, so it is clearly in their interest to have the event well planned and achievable.
This planning is an involved and often lengthy process. According to Vossekuil et al.
(2004), most school shooters create a plan at least 2 days before initiating their attack
on students and teachers. Yet many of them plan not for days but for weeks or months
prior to carrying out their shooting spree. For example, the Columbine killers, Eric
Harris and Dylan Klebold, spent more than a year preparing their attack (Larkin,
2007). Everything was planned well beforehand. The assault, which if executed as
intended, would have included numerous additional fatalities from bombs and explo-
sives; it was timed to coincide with the anniversary of Hitler’s birthday in April.
Under their black trench coats, Klebold and Harris carried two sawed-off 12-gauge
shotguns and a 9 mm semiautomatic rifle, all of which were obtained by Klebold’s
girlfriend, who had just turned 18 years of age. In addition, the Columbine duo car-
ried a 9 mm semiautomatic pistol, which they had purchased from a fellow employee
in a local pizza shop. Such elaborate and lengthy planning necessitated rational pre-
meditation; this was not simply an impulsive or spontaneous act.
Recently, Robert Hawkins, the 2007 Omaha mall shooter, wrote in a suicide note
that he “just snapped.The notion of “snapping, wildly pervasive in the popular
image of mass murderers, suggests that the violent onslaughts are spur-of-the-
moment, impulsive reactions to final life stressors. The common misconception
portrays the killer as a madman who suddenly “goes berserk” or “runs amokand kills
a large number of people with hardly any particular rationale, trigger, or objective.
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1238 American Behavioral Scientist
These slang expressions do not accurately describe the vast majority of mass
murders (adolescent or adult) in the contemporary United States. Spontaneity and
randomness may be appropriate descriptors for homicidal maniacs who genuinely
suffer from psychotic delusions and hallucinations. However, such overly simplistic
explanations are fundamentally inappropriate in any understanding of the deeper
psychological and sociological motivations of most modern-day mass killers. It is
clear that the majority of massacres have involved deliberate planning and rational
thought (Fox & Levin, 1994b; Newman et al., 2004; Vossekuil et al., 2004), and only
a small minority of mass killers have been psychotic (Holmes & Holmes, 2001) or
diagnosed with mental health or behavior disorders (Vossekuil et al., 2004).
This logic leads to a troubling but inevitable conclusion. If mass murderers are
rational actors and not hallucinating maniacs, then a violent massacre must in some
way provide a rational, if terribly immoral, solution. In fact, for school shooters (and
likely other mass killers as well), the massacre serves to solve their most pressing
problems of damaged personal identity and tarnished self-worth.
Merton’s (1938, 1968) theory of anomie conceptualized innovation as a response
to American society’s overemphasis on the cultural goal of success and underempha-
sis on the legitimate opportunities for achieving that success. It is well documented
that impoverished youth may turn from the legitimate system to criminal activities
in an effort to achieve monetary reward. Innovation also may apply to middle-class
delinquents who are desperate to be recognized as popular and powerful among their
peers. Many of the shooters apparently hold reasonably high expectations for their
lives, being mostly successful in an academic sense and from parents with middle-
class backgrounds. In a deadly version of innovation, however, they go on a ram-
page, when they see no other way to become accepted among their schoolmates as
powerful and important individuals who cannot be ignored.
One of the Columbine killers, Eric Harris, had written in his diary about his plans
to “leave a lasting impression on the world,(Healey, 2006). He wrote that he and
Klebold intended to hijack a plane filled with bombs and crash it into the New York
City skyline.
Virginia Tech killer Seung-Hui Cho was desperate to make his fellow students
take notice of him. On the afternoon of April 16, 2007, in the midst of his killing
spree, Cho took a break long enough to get to the post office and mail photos of
himself to NBC News. These photos depicted Cho as a dangerous and powerful
person holding guns and knives in a threatening posture. By the end of the day, he
had shot to death 32 students and instructors on the Virginia Tech campus.
As Kimmel and Maher (2003) and Newman et al. (2004) have previously noted, the
utility of a school massacre as a masculine gender performance is paramount. When we
consider the manner in which much of Western culture equates violence with masculin-
ity, we can begin to comprehend such a despicable act as a deliberate plan designed to
control the image others have of the killer (as a powerful and masculine individual) in
the socially approved manner for men, with violence. By one last catastrophic show of
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Levin, Madfis / Mass Murder at School and Cumulative Strain 1239
force, continually humiliated, ignored, and emasculated boys feel homicidal violence
on a massive scale will regain lost feelings of masculinity, pride, and power and pos-
sibly result in the added bonus of achieving international fame.
After the final cumulative loss, the killer has set his mind on the terrifying vision
of massive human destruction as a way to gain a personal sense of pride, accom-
plishment, and masculine force. A period of planning must take place, during which
the prospective killer locates an appropriate weapon, prepares the logistics of the
attack, selects appropriate targets, and so on. For this event to successfully take
place, not only must it be meticulously planned; various facilitating factors need to
be in place to transform a deadly dream into a terrifying reality.
Stage 5: Massacre at School
As previously suggested, most bullied and rejected youngsters never commit a
massacre, even if they suffer from chronic and acute strain and distance themselves
from mainstream sources of social control. It is similarly true that many severely
troubled young people who have seriously considered committing a mass murder and
even planned for their deadly attack have not gone through with it. Additionally, some
people desiring to be mass killers make attempts yet fail because of a critical lack of
facilitating factors, such as the training in or access to firearms or deadly explosives.
First and foremost, a certain level of competence, and firearm proficiency in par-
ticular, is necessary to actually carry out a homicidal rampage. Fired from his job
and rejected by his girlfriend, Dion Terres was sick and tired of being pushed around
and desired to get even by perpetrating a mass murder. In August 1993, the mentally
ill 26-year-old man parked his car in the lot of a Kenosha, Wisconsin, McDonald’s
restaurant and grabbed his weapons from the front seat. Unfortunately for him, he
also locked his keys in his car along with the 30-round gun clip for his semiauto-
matic and totally forgot about the spare clip that he carried in the pocket of his
jacket. Forging ahead, he still killed two people in the restaurant with his .44-caliber
revolver. Terres’s psychotic state of mind had made him so confused that he failed
in his mission to amass a much larger body count (Fox & Levin, 2005).
According to Cohen and Felson (1979) and Felson (1994), in their routine-activities
theory, predatory crimes occur only when suitable targets are available, effective guard-
ians are absent, and motivated (or “likely”) offenders are present. Multiple-victim shoot-
ings at schools contain all three of Cohen and Felson’s foreground-level factors: multiple
students collectively despised by the shooter(s), who are congregated closely together in
classrooms or public places; an absence of armed resource officers in the immediate area
(few school shootings are ended because of the intervention of law enforcement); and a
student who is dedicated to killing his schoolmates.
To explain, also in Felson’s foreground-level manner, why school massacres feasibly
occur and take multiple lives, one must look to the presence of a weapon of mass
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1240 American Behavioral Scientist
destruction, most frequently, a firearm. Consistent with the routine-activities perspective,
most of the school shooters conveniently acquired the gun(s) used in their rampage from
their own home or the home of a close relative or friend (Vossekuil et al., 2004). Fifteen-
year-old school shooter Kip Kinkel of Springfield, Oregon, used the pistols and semiau-
tomatic rifle that his father gave him as a present to carry out his massacre, and Michael
Carneal of West Paducah, Kentucky, stole the .22-caliber Ruger pistol he used to commit
mass murder from a neighbors father (Fox et al., 2008). The absence of a semiautomatic
firearm, conversely, reduces the likelihood that a school shooting might be turned into a
mass murder. In November 2004, for example, a 15-year-old student at a high school in
Valparaiso, Indiana, stabbed seven of his classmates with two large knives. However,
none of these injuries were life threatening.
In addition, routine-activities theory helps to make clear the selection of victims
in school shootings. Few episodes of school violence result in any death at all, let
alone a large body count, and the vast majority of homicides have a single victim
(Hagan et al., 2002). For a massacre to occur, a number of suitable targets must be
available for slaughter. As previously mentioned, youths who target multiple victims
may be motivated to kill en masse to set a new record or achieve infamy. The mas-
sacre is, in some cases, meant to be an act of revenge, but it may also be designed to
send a message: “I am much more powerful and important than you thought. I can-
not be ignored.” This morbid statement is only as potent as the action is deadly, and
so a massacre sends the strongest message. Routine-activities theory helps explain
why the school classroom or campus serves as the ideal site for a massacre, as the
crowded classrooms and bustling campuses pack unsuspecting victims (not to men-
tion bitter rivals and despised authority figures) closely together.
Virginia Tech killer Seung-Hui Cho came to the United States at the age of 8.
Throughout his middle and high school years, Cho was humiliated, on a daily basis,
by his classmates, who made fun of his flat affect, his extreme shyness, and his lack
of fluency in English (Cho & Gardner, 2007). It seems entirely plausible that Cho’s
real enemies were not at Virginia Tech but in the public schools where he had been
bullied. It would have been difficult, if not impossible, however, for Cho to have
targeted his classmates from an earlier period in his life. They were now scattered
across the country and inaccessible as a group. On his campus, however, Cho was
able to commit multiple murder by proxy. Virginia Tech students were in proximity
and available in large numbers. They stood in for the many classmates who had
victimized Cho during his formative school years. In the absence of a firearm and
students packed into classrooms, he might have injured or killed 1, but not 32.
Preventing Multiple-Victim School Shootings
In the panicked aftermath of the attack at Columbine High School in 1999,
numerous shortsighted policies were designed to satiate the public; reduce the
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Levin, Madfis / Mass Murder at School and Cumulative Strain 1241
anxieties of teachers, students, and parents; and make politicians appear to be pro-
tecting us. “Inventive” solutions included the excessive use of resource officers and
metal detectors in suburban schools and increasingly rigid zero-tolerance policies.
One Georgia legislator proposed allowing faculty members to carry concealed hand-
guns to class. Over time and as the hysteria regarding the Columbine massacre
subsided, these shortsighted, politically expedient, and punitive policies lost much
of their traction. In the wake of the 2007 attacks at Virginia Tech, however, many of
these same proposals again came to the forefront of the debate.
It is important to emphasize that many school shootings take place during a
period of less than 15 min (Vossekuil et al., 2004), so reactive measures (such as
resource officers, emergency plans, and even armed faculty members) can ultimately
accomplish little. Resource officers were on guard at Northern Illinois University
and Columbine High School, but they were not able to reach the mass killers in time
to avert disaster. From a routine-activities perspective, increasing the number and
effectiveness of capable guardians and engaging in target-hardening tactics to dimin-
ish their suitability and easy access does nothing to diminish the third and most vital
of Felson’s (1994) factors, the motivation of offenders. To this end, the focus must
also be on long-term prevention techniques to ensure that students do not develop
the desire to engage in a school massacre in the first place.
Our analysis suggests that incidents of multiple-victim shootings aimed at stu-
dents and teachers might be deterred early on by reducing the chronic strains expe-
rienced by students who are likely to turn violent. Frequently, there are important
warning signs—bullying, serious acts of animal abuse, lack of friendships—to iden-
tify students who have suffered prolonged frustration in school and/or at home and
are in urgent need of assistance from supportive adults. The problem is that teachers,
school psychologists, and counselors do not always react to troubled students until
they become troublesome and are seen as a threat to others.
In our view, it often takes years of being teased, bullied, and/or neglected by peers
before a student develops a plan to kill his classmates and teachers. By the time a
youngster has murderous intentions, it is usually too late to intervene. But years
earlier, a sensitive teacher, a perceptive guidance counselor, or even a concerned
parent might have made all the difference. If strains are counteracted early on, then
the cumulative impact of isolation, catastrophic losses, and planning lose their effi-
cacy in regard to producing a massacre.
There are changes at the individual level that can be encouraged by competent adult
advisors and counselors. Students who are able to modify their personal standards or
change their objectives may also be able to reduce the strain in their lives. Important
modifications in goals may require effective guidance, counseling, or even medication.
Millions of young people across the country, regardless of their potential risks for vio-
lence, would be better served by the intervention of parents, teachers, administrators, and
school psychologists in bullying and harassment among students. Fortunately, many
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1242 American Behavioral Scientist
principals across the country, thanks to the fear that their students and staff will be tar-
geted next, have recently enacted antibullying programs and policies. They aim at chang-
ing the student culture rather than focusing on changing bullied students. One effective
and preventative solution is a curricular intervention that promotes peace and social
justice. Such programs teach students to put aside their differences and cooperate
together for the purpose of achieving mutually satisfying objectives. This intervention
emphasizes that students can benefit by their rejection of bullying and by their interde-
pendence in the classroom and on the playground. In American culture, the masculine
role is frequently defined by elements of dominance, violence, and militarism. Because
almost all of the school shooters have been males, an effective conflict resolution policy
should promote more constructive images of masculinity.
Second Step is a widely employed conflict resolution curriculum that aims at
helping children learn to solve their problems, develop empathy, manage their anger,
and control their impulses. The program focuses on reducing aggressive behavior by
proactively teaching the emotional and social skills necessary for children to get
along well with others. Research suggests that Second Step is effective in achieving
its objectives (Grossman et al., 1997).
Oliver and Ryan’s (2003) Lesson One is another educational program that helps
elementary school children to develop their life skills and internal discipline.
Through experiential activities and games, students are taught self-control, self-
confidence, problem solving, and cooperation. In the classroom, students are given
an opportunity to test the skills they have acquired and to share how they use these
skills with other children. Several systematic studies suggest that Lesson One has a
positive impact on student culture (Oliver & Ryan, 2003).
In Stage 2, we saw that some angry students externalize the blame for their miser-
ies. Students who go on a rampage are unlikely to take responsibility for their own
actions, accept their marginal status among conventional peers, or adjust to the role
of outsider. Some youngsters who never seriously consider violent vengeance may
find sources of self-esteem beyond popularity. In response to gay-baiting and peer
humiliation, targeted students may resist and gain much needed self-esteem by
developing competence in other valued areas of life, such as in scholarship, extracur-
ricular activities, athletics, or music and art or with family members.
Moreover, many students who suffer from strain for a lengthy period of time never
experience a catastrophic loss and instead mature from middle to high school status, high
school to college status, or into adulthood, where peer influence declines in significance.
It is important to intervene in the lives of desperate students emotionally on the fringe
long before they potentially suffer acute strain in the form of a catastrophic event. When
such a calamitous occurrence does arise in their lives, they will then have the self-esteem
and social support system in place to soften the blow.
Additionally, as our fourth stage clearly indicates, school massacres are by and
large carefully planned for days, weeks, or months before they take place.
Fortunately, many attackers also reveal some element of this plan to their friends or
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Levin, Madfis / Mass Murder at School and Cumulative Strain 1243
family members. Vossekuil et al. (2004) found that 81% of their sample revealed
their homicidal plot to at least one person, and 59% informed two or more people.
These facts speak to the dire need for students to break their culture of silence, take
threats seriously, and come forward with such pivotal information. Because of the
widespread publicity of certain school massacres, this change has already begun to
take place. Many shootings since the momentous Columbine attacks in 1999 have
been narrowly averted because trusted young confidants have revealed the dangerous
intentions of their peers to the authorities (Butterfield, 2001).
Finally, students who lack access to and training in the use of particularly lethal
weapons may injure but not kill many. Though it is much more common for a young
student to attack a classmate in school with a knife, guns are the most common
weapons used to commit multiple homicide. If parents, grandparents, or other adult
relatives keep a firearm in the home, they must be absolutely certain that it is inac-
cessible to troubled children and teenagers.
Notes
1. The authors’ names have been listed alphabetically to reflect their equal contributions to the article.
2. There have in fact been several female school shooters but almost always of the single- or double-
victim variety, with Latina Williams’s fatal shooting of two of her fellow classmates at Louisiana
Technical College in 2008 being the most recent. Masculine pronouns have therefore been used through-
out this article.
3. Larkin (2007) suggests that Columbine killer Dylan Klebold may have been unsure of his sexuality.
4. By no means do the authors intend to suggest that being different, befriending people who are out
of the mainstream, or participating in youth subcultures (which are, more frequently than not, prosocial
cultural endeavors) usually facilitate a move to violence. In addition, the fact that the name Trenchcoat
Mafia was initially created not by its members but rather by other students at Columbine High as a
derogatory term for the friendship clique (Larkin, 2007) indicates just how potentially dangerous it can
be for school administrators and teachers to use outsider status as a warning sign for murderous behavior.
Rather than reduce a potential threat, this approach can doubly victimize already marginalized kids
through negative attention from school authorities.
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Mass Murder; and Serial Killers and Sadistic Murderers—Up Close and Personal. Levin has also pub-
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... Certainly, surveillance is warranted as a safety precaution in some cases, but social support is also vitally preventative for mitigating strains, conflicts, and potential acts of violence, while concomitantly fostering prosocial behaviors and a healthy school climate (Forster et al., 2020;Lazarus & Sulkowski, 2023;Levin & Madfis, 2009;Malecki & Demaray, 2002). In a larger social context in which surveillance and social control in school settings are typically exerted in racially biased ways (Hirschfield, 2010;Kupchik, 2010;Kupchik & Ward, 2014;Morris, 2016;Muñiz, 2021), it is vital to assess whether (and to what extent) threat assessment teams exhibit racial or ethnic bias in their decision making. 1 There are important implications for policy and practice related to increasing equity in school systems around this issue. ...
... Surveillance recommendations included enhanced monitoring and supervising students' behaviors and randomly searching students in the school setting, as well as enhanced monitoring and supervising students' behaviors in the home setting. Such strategies may be warranted as a safety precaution but should be paired with social support to mitigate conflicts and prevent acts of violence effectively (Forster et al., 2020;Lazarus & Sulkowski, 2023;Levin & Madfis, 2009;Malecki & Demaray, 2002). Study findings provide evidence that the threat assessment team recommended a variety of both surveillance and supportive strategies for students of concern. ...
Article
Few studies have examined threat assessment team recommendations and how they vary by race/ethnicity, and none have evaluated the particular two-tiered approach of the Salem-Keizer Cascade Model (SKCTAM). The current study investigates school threat assessment team recommendations related to social support and surveillance and how they vary by student race/ethnicity. All recommendations (n = 274) were obtained from one large Northwestern school district (with an enrollment of approximately 40,000 students) between the 2012–2013 and 2018–2019 school years. Results indicate an even distribution of supportive and surveillance recommendations and no discernable pattern across these two categories in the most common recommendations. The most prevalent social support recommendations involved encouraging positive future activities, mentorship relationships, mental health services, and safe means of reporting thoughts and intentions to harm others. The most common surveillance recommendations included monitoring communications at school and home and having intermittent check-ins with students following threats. Overall, few differences in recommendations related to race/ethnicity were found. Accordingly, consistent with existing research, threat assessment practices can potentially address critical student issues and prevent school violence more equitably.
... Relatedly, men who report experiencing acceptance and status threats have greater attraction to guns and more aggressive responses to perceived conflict (Scaptura & Boyd, 2021). Economically and racially advantaged men are especially likely to fit this description, which signifies the need for intersectional perspectives (e.g., Madfis, 2014) and better understandings of what Levin and Madfis (2009) call cumulative strain. ...
... For example, powerful and pervasive industries like media entertainment (e.g., films, music, radio shows, advertising) build hegemonic ideals normalizing men's violence and how it is achieved (Katz, 2011), while subordinating/subjugating women, girls, and others (APA, 2007). Further, guns are promoted as masculine tools (Levin & Madfis, 2009) with rewarding qualities (Katz, 2011), often across racialized lines (Carlson, 2015), which is reflective in ownership: there are more guns than citizens in America, and these are disproportionately owned by white men (Schaeffer, 2021))--not coincidentally, those who feel most victimized by social progress (Kimmel, 2013). ...
Chapter
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Few studies have theorized or analyzed the importance of macrolevel forces (e.g., social, political, economic, and ideological) on mass shootings/murders in America. To address the gap and bring to light the omnipotent and multi-faceted nature of structural/systemic factors in shaping violence, this chapter examines one of the most powerful, pervasive, and enduring systems of oppression-patriarchy. By investigating patriarchy, along with interrelated and interlocking systems, we can better understand broad forces constructing perpetrator norms, attitudes, drives, and actions. Further, through considerations of popular and pronounced masculinity predilections, nuanced features can be acknowledged, ascertained, and applied in ways that contribute to comprehension. Using "Patriarchy's 6 Patterns of Male Mass Killers", cases of male-perpetrated mass murder occurring in 2019 were analyzed (n = 27). Findings revealed unique yet overlapping and cooccurring masculinity features underlying these highly performative gender crimes. In all, structures create complex dimensions that can hide under a common guise, which carries implications for how we understand, typify, and respond to mass murders.
... Левин и Э. Мэдфис пришли к выводу, что если у школьных стрелков не имели места психические расстройства, то массовое убийство является примером рационального асоциального и аморального поведения на основе планирования своего поступка. Левин и Мэдфис отмечали, что действия стрелков представляют собой решение проблемы ущемленного чувства их собственного достоинства, а также выступают средством привлечения внимания к себе окружающих, способ заявить о своей мужественности, поскольку многие молодые мужчины считают, что стрельба позволит им вернуть утраченные чувства власти, гордости и внимания [Levin, Madfis 2009]. ...
Article
Скулшутинг (массовые нападения в учебных заведениях), ставший из «аме-риканской эпидемии» глобальным явлением, с 2014 г. активно продвигается в России через молодежную контркультуру, виртуальные сообщества и социальные медиа. На основе компаративного научного обзора представлены особенности изучения проблемы скулшутинга в США и России, выявлены единые и специфические подходы, позволяющие понять многогранность факторов, влияющих на эти преступления, получившие продвижение во многих странах мира. Распространение культа насилия как модели поведения, героизация и мифологизация образа героя-террориста в медиакультуре, акты совершения скулшутинга рассматриваются как важные источники распространения идеологии скулшутинга в глобальном аспекте. На основе сопоставления кейсов в США и России показаны особенности скулшутинга, выявлены тенденции в его проявлении, раскрыты внешние и внутренние факторы. Представленные выводы о сущности и продвижении скулшутинга в условиях медиакультуры могут быть применимы для работы с молодежной аудиторией и для создания системы безопасного пространства для личности в глобальном и индивидуальном аспектах.
... One opportunity-focused approach has been the application of routine activities theory (Schildkraut et al., 2019;Silva & Greene-Colozzi, 2021). Others have turned to Agnew's general strain theory (Fox & Levin, 2012;Fridel, 2017) or related models such as cumulative strain theory (Levin & Madfis, 2009;Silver et al., 2019), strained masculinity (Kalish & Kimmel, 2010;Kennedy-Kollar & Charles, 2013;Madfis, 2014;Morgan et al., 2022), and sexual-frustration theory (Lankford & Silva, 2024). There is also an emerging recognition that grievance (a deeply held feeling of having been mistreated at the hands of an identified person or entity who is blamed for the offender's ongoing suffering) may be a unifying concept that transcends historical typologies of public mass attackers that rely on factors such as event location or the presence or absence of ideological concerns (Brooks & Barry-Walsh, 2022;Capellan and Anisin, 2018;Clemmow et al., 2022;Corner & Taylor, 2023;Ebbrecht & Lindekilde, 2023). ...
Article
Researchers of public mass murder have identified a growing list of correlates and relevant criminological theories but have not fully appreciated a previously identified and unusual characteristic of these events—offenders rarely make any effort to escape the scene of their attack, either dying there by suicide (or at the hands of others) or accepting that the attack is their “final act” in society and that they will be arrested and die in prison. Although these outcomes objectively differ, in at least one way they can be considered functionally equivalent—each extinguishes the offender’s existing life. This nearly universal characteristic appears worthy of increased research attention. One potential avenue for future efforts rests on a leading theory of suicide—The Interpersonal Theory of Suicide—according to which suicidality precedes and underlies all murder-suicides. Consideration of this theory points to potential avenues for reassessing known correlates and existing theoretical work.
Article
We examine if adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) directly affect the amount of harm (victims and injuries) caused in mass public shootings or whether ACEs have a mediating or moderating influence on a variety of factors previously associated with the amount of harm caused in mass shootings. Using publicly available data, our results show that ACEs do not directly affect harm. In the mediation model, results indicate the number of ACEs experienced by the shooters indirectly affected the harm of the event, but only through the shooters possessing fame-seeking motivations. In the moderation model, the significant interactions show the strongest relationships between ACEs and harm for those without mental distress or life stressors or signs of crisis. Recommendations for future research and practice are offered.
Article
Rampage school shootings, where students go to their own school to randomly kill classmates, teachers, friends, and strangers, are among the most drastic types of human behavior. While research increasingly points to interaction dynamics as being key for the emergence of crime and violence, scholars have not yet systematically studied interaction dynamics in school shootings. Further, existing research usually focuses on a handful of cases where many victims were killed and overlook rampages with no or few fatalities. To fill these gaps, my study analyzes interaction dynamics in a full sample of US rampage school shootings. It triangulates novel types of data in a mixed methods approach that combines in‐depth qualitative analyses, cross‐case comparisons, and descriptive statistics. Findings highlight that specific interactional patterns to rampages exist that correlate to whether shootings end in mass killings. Shooters systematically use interactional pathways in which they avoid facing victims. They further show that most shooters are bad at killing, despite motivation and planning. Findings have implications for our understanding of violence and school safety, as well as the role of situational interaction in leading to social outcomes more broadly. Please see video abstract at: https://youtu.be/H7xHMQd5RT0 .
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The purpose of the study is to identify the peculiarities of the attitude of high school students, as subjects of the educational environment, to the phenomenon of school shooting for further effective prophylactic measures to prevent the occurrence of destructive manifestations in the youth environment. The article examines the factors and causes of the appearance of school shooting in children and youth environment, analyzes personal ideas about the phenomenon of school shooting and the attitude of high school students towards it. The interrelation of the perception of the phenomenon of school shooting and the psychological characteristics of schoolchildren (self-esteem indicators with the level of pretension, anxiety, aggressiveness) has been revealed, which makes it possible to assess potential risks arising in the educational environment and develop comprehensive psychological programs for the prevention of school shooting. The scientific novelty of the study lies in the fact that it presents the peculiarities of the perception of school shooting as an actual social and psychological phenomenon for domestic research in connection with the psychological characteristics of high school students. As a result of the study, the causes and factors of the appearance of school shooting in the educational environment were determined. It was found that the attitude to school shooting among high school students of mass schools varies from neutral to negative. No positive attitude to this phenomenon was revealed. The attitude to school shooting is most clearly manifested in the projective drawings of high school students. It was also found that such personal characteristics of high school students as self-esteem, anxiety and aggressiveness affect the attitude to school shooting very slightly.
Article
This study presents a comparative case study analysis of three fame seeking mass shootings that arose in Eastern Europe. It draws on commonly assessed correlates, especially those stemming to Cumulative Strain Theory, to investigate whether there are differences or similarities inherent to the fame seeking phenomenon in this under-studied context. The inquiry reveals that the fame seeking phenomenon in Eastern Europe is not necessarily statistically rarer than in the U.S. in relation to the total universe of all mass shootings. Fame seekers in this context experienced similar forms of strains and adverse experiences as their American counterparts stemming to family issues, bullying, and isolation. Fame seekers also meticulously planned their attacks and two of the three cases featured offenders detonating homemade bombs. Ideationally, fame seeking appears to be heavily reliant on information that offenders obtain through the internet and mass media outlets about previous attacks, which entails that fame seeking has become a globalized phenomenon.
Article
Societal crises, such as COVID-19, produce societal instability and create a fertile ground for radicalization. Extremists exploit such crises by distributing disinformation to amplify uncertainty and distrust. Based on these developments, this study presents a longitudinal analysis across three different non-violent extremist ideologies in the UK (Islamist, far right and eco-radicals). As part of the study, public social media channels Twitter/X, Facebook, and Telegram) of Britain First, 5 Pillars, and Earth First! were analyzed using a computational language classifier of over 36,000 posts between 2016 and 2021. The increasing prevalence of conspiracy narratives, as well as violent, hateful, and threatening language among the corpus indicates that radicalization dynamics were present and heightened, pre-, during, and post-Pandemic.
Chapter
Roughly a decade after the substantial spike in the middle and high school massacres that occurred in the '90s, we have now seen this disturbing phenomenon arise anew on American college campuses. Overall, these horrifying, high profile acts of violence on college campuses remain relatively rare, nevertheless, academic administrators are required to manage threats of violence on an increasingly regular basis. As colleges and universities face the realities of today's educational environment, preparing for an active shooter event has become a necessity. The mass shooting at the University of Texas at Austin in 1966 has been hailed as the first major college campus-shooting incident. Since then, years of active shooting training and protocol development and evolution has taken place. A description of four of the deadliest college campus shootings (University of Texas at Austin, Virginia Tech, Oikos University, and Umpqua Community College) and the progression of the related active shooter protocols is provided.
Book
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On April 20, 1999, two Colorado teenagers went on a shooting rampage at Columbine High School. That day, Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold killed twelve fellow students and a teacher, as well as wounding twenty-four other people, before they killed themselves. Although there have been other books written about the tragedy, this is the first serious, impartial investigation into the cultural, environmental, and psychological causes of the massacre. Based on first-hand interviews and a thorough reading of the relevant literature, Ralph Larkin examines the numerous factors that led the two young men to plan and carry out their deed. For Harris and Klebold, Larkin concludes, the carnage was an act of revenge against the "jocks" who had harassed and humiliated them, retribution against evangelical students who acted as if they were morally superior, an acting out of the mythology of right-wing paramilitary organization members to "die in a blaze of glory," and a deep desire for notoriety. Rather than simply looking at Columbine as a crucible for all school violence, Larkin places the tragedy in its proper context, and in doing so, examines its causes and meaning.
Article
Faith in the free market--the idea that, for instance, profit-seeking managed care companies will improve the health care delivery system--has become a basic tenet of public policy debate. But as Joel Blau demonstrates in this eye-opening book, so-called “free market” programs have been a dismal failure, heightening inequality, lowering the median standard of living, and steadily eroding the quality of our social and political life. In Illusions of Prosperity, Blau launches a far-reaching assault on idea that “the market” knows best. Blau writes that while the share of the national income held by the bottom four fifths of the population (the poor and broad middle class combined) has continued to decline, the top fifth gained 97 percent of the increase in total household income between 1979 and 1994. “Few experiments,” Blau comments, “yield such clear outcomes. Although many had hoped to benefit from the new market economy, this affluent fifth is the only segment of the population that truly has.” Blau looks at recent reforms in NAFTA, education, job training, welfare, and much more, showing that the new social policies have made matters worse, because reforms that rely on the market can’t compensate for the market’s deficiencies. Instead, he calls for a stronger, more caring government to counter the debilitating effects of the market, and he urges the development of the broadest possible political alliances to ensure economic security. Sure to raise controversy, Illusions of Prosperity turns today’s conventional wisdom inside out, making a profound case for the importance of a strong government in a world where markets do not have all the answers.