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Situational Crime Prevention as a Harm Mitigation Policy for Active Shooter Incidents

NCJ Number
310294
Journal
Criminology & Public Policy Volume: 23 Issue: 4 Dated: November 2024 Pages: 947-979
Author(s)
Emily A. Greene-Colozzi; Joshua D. Freilich
Date Published
October 2024
Length
33 pages
Annotation

This paper explores situational crime prevention (SCP) as a harm mitigation policy for active shooter incidents.

Abstract

This study examining whether situational crime prevention (SCP) interventions reduce incident casualty outcomes in active shooter incidents finds a harm mitigation role for SCP: active shooter sites with stronger holistic SCP had fewer casualties. SCP is an environmental crime control perspective with enormous practical and policy relevance due to its practitioner-friendly theoretical approach. The authors assessed perpetrator motivation to test displacement, a core critique of SCP, and found that the harm mitigation potential of SCP persists even in the presence of a highly motivated offender. The study used an inductive, open-source data set of 555 active shooter and mass public shooting sites to study the applicability of SCP to active shooter and mass public violence.  SCP could be a practical and effective method to decrease casualties in the event of an active shooting, which is a highly motivated crime type that is difficult to predict and prevent. Public locations may select a range of appropriate SCP techniques based on individual resources and needs. The totality and interactions of these techniques may contribute to public safety in general, with diffuse benefits. This policy solution is highly oriented toward practice and real-life application, and may be used to supplement existing preventative measures like threat assessment and gun legislation. (Published Abstract Provided)