Description

Book Synopsis

Twenty Years of School-based Mass Shootings in the United States: Columbine to Santa Fe is an examination of twenty years of school-based mass shootings, from Columbine to Santa Fe, exploring the larger environmental framework within which these incidents occurred. Angelyn Spaulding Flowers and Cotina Lane Pixley use a mixed-methods approach to examine a diverse set of factors, identifying risk and protective factors along with specifically desired public policy responses by evaluating the convergence of variables from the range of school-based mass shootings included in this study. These variables include the type of weapon used, the availability of that type of weapon, perpetrator characteristics, school characteristics, as well as the geospatial and demographic characteristics of the school neighborhood. These school-based mass shooting incidents are explored at both the state and regional level and are further discussed in comparison to leisure time gun use, homicide rates, and suicide rates in the geographical area. The overarching geospatial analytical framework for this research also includes an examination of the manner in which existing policy enactments such as state gun laws vary by geography. Spaulding Flowers and Lane Pixley argue that the increased number of fatalities in school-based mass shooting is largely due to the increased lethality of the weapons, and they propose alternative solutions. Scholars of criminology, sociology, political science, and history will find this book particularly useful.



Table of Contents

Acknowledgments

Introduction

Chapter 1: Historical Perspective on School-Based Mass Shootings

Chapter 2: The U.S. Legal Framework for Firearms

Chapter 3: Guns, Culture, and School-Based Mass Shootings: The Regional and State Context

Chapter 4: School-Based Mass Shootings and the Socio-Economics of Place

Chapter 5: Meeting at the Nexus: School Level and Weapons

Chapter 6: School-Based Mass Shooters

Chapter 7: Public Policy Considerations

Conclusion

References

About the Authors

Index

Twenty Years of School-based Mass Shootings in

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    A Paperback / softback by Angelyn Spaulding Flowers, Cotina Lane Pixley

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      View other formats and editions of Twenty Years of School-based Mass Shootings in by Angelyn Spaulding Flowers

      Publisher: Lexington Books
      Publication Date: 24/08/2022
      ISBN13: 9781793613158, 978-1793613158
      ISBN10: 179361315X

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Twenty Years of School-based Mass Shootings in the United States: Columbine to Santa Fe is an examination of twenty years of school-based mass shootings, from Columbine to Santa Fe, exploring the larger environmental framework within which these incidents occurred. Angelyn Spaulding Flowers and Cotina Lane Pixley use a mixed-methods approach to examine a diverse set of factors, identifying risk and protective factors along with specifically desired public policy responses by evaluating the convergence of variables from the range of school-based mass shootings included in this study. These variables include the type of weapon used, the availability of that type of weapon, perpetrator characteristics, school characteristics, as well as the geospatial and demographic characteristics of the school neighborhood. These school-based mass shooting incidents are explored at both the state and regional level and are further discussed in comparison to leisure time gun use, homicide rates, and suicide rates in the geographical area. The overarching geospatial analytical framework for this research also includes an examination of the manner in which existing policy enactments such as state gun laws vary by geography. Spaulding Flowers and Lane Pixley argue that the increased number of fatalities in school-based mass shooting is largely due to the increased lethality of the weapons, and they propose alternative solutions. Scholars of criminology, sociology, political science, and history will find this book particularly useful.



      Table of Contents

      Acknowledgments

      Introduction

      Chapter 1: Historical Perspective on School-Based Mass Shootings

      Chapter 2: The U.S. Legal Framework for Firearms

      Chapter 3: Guns, Culture, and School-Based Mass Shootings: The Regional and State Context

      Chapter 4: School-Based Mass Shootings and the Socio-Economics of Place

      Chapter 5: Meeting at the Nexus: School Level and Weapons

      Chapter 6: School-Based Mass Shooters

      Chapter 7: Public Policy Considerations

      Conclusion

      References

      About the Authors

      Index

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