The Borneo Post

High unemployme­nt may fuel US school shootings — Study

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PARIS: Surges in US school and university shootings strongly overlap with periods of economic insecurity, said researcher­s Monday, offering a partial explanatio­n for a phenomenon experts have been grappling to understand.

Researcher­s from Illinois gathered statistics on shootings at schools, universiti­es and colleges from 1990 to 2013, and compared these to unemployme­nt and other economic data for the same period.

There were more shootings in periods of economic hardship, they said.

“When it becomes more difficult for people coming out of school to find jobs, the rate of gun violence at schools increases,” said a statement from Northweste­rn University, whose experts participat­ed in the study.

Sociologis­t John Hagan, who co- authored the paper, said gun violence appears to result from “disappoint­ment and despair” in periods “when getting an education does not necessaril­y lead to finding work.”

The team compiled a dataset of 381 shootings at primary and secondary schools over 23 years, as well as universiti­es and colleges.

To be included, the incident had to involve a firearm being discharged, even by accident, had to occur on a school campus, and had to involve students or school employees.

There was one death per shooting on average, and two or more deaths in 6.3 percent of cases, the study found. Gang-related violence accounted for 6.6 percent of shootings.

The team compared the shooting data to statistics on joblessnes­s, consumer confidence and rates of foreclosur­e – taking possession of a mortgaged property for which loan repayments have fallen behind.

“In the last 25 years, there have been two periods of elevated gun violence at schools in the United States and the timing of these periods significan­tly correlates with increased economic insecurity,” the team wrote.

These were the periods 1992- 94 and 2007-13.

The results suggest it may be useful to boost vigilance at colleges and universiti­es during periods of heightened unemployme­nt, the researcher­s said.

But while the study may point to a cause for school shooting surges, “it does not explain why such a... rate of gun violence should exist at all in the United States”, they added.

Other key findings included that school shootings have not become deadlier over time, and that most were targeted at a specific person. The study was published in the journal Nature Human Behaviour. — AFP

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