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'''Mass shootings''' are attacks in which one or more people use firearms to kill or attempt to kill multiple people in a single incident. The term is widely used in media, research, policing and politics, but there is no single worldwide definition.
A mass shooting typically involves an individual or a group intentionally targeting multiple people in a public or private setting. The exact criteria for what constitutes a mass shooting may vary across jurisdictions, but it generally involves a certain number of victims and casualties. The term "mass shooting" is often used interchangeably with terms like "mass murder" or "mass killing."
Definitions vary by country and by data set. Some systems count only deaths, some count deaths and injuries, some include domestic incidents, and some focus on public attacks. The FBI uses the related term active shooter for one or more people actively engaged in killing or attempting to kill people in a populated area. United States law also uses the term mass killing for incidents with three or more killings in a single incident.
== Causes ==
Mass shootings are complex phenomena influenced by various factors. Some common factors associated with mass shootings include:
== Definition ==
The simplest meaning is a shooting with multiple victims. The difficulty is deciding how many victims are required, whether the attacker is counted, whether injuries are counted, and whether the incident must happen in a public place.
# Mental Health Issues: Some perpetrators of mass shootings may have a history of mental health problems, although it is essential to note that the majority of individuals with mental health issues are not violent.
# Access to Firearms: Easy access to firearms, particularly high-capacity weapons, can increase the lethality of mass shootings and make them more likely to occur.
# Copycat Phenomenon: Media coverage and the extensive reporting of mass shootings can potentially inspire others to commit similar acts of violence.
# Social Alienation and Isolation: Feelings of social isolation, marginalization, or grievances can contribute to a sense of anger or resentment that may motivate individuals to carry out acts of violence.
Researchers often separate several overlapping categories:
== Notable Examples ==
Several high-profile mass shootings have occurred throughout history. Some notable examples include:
* public mass shootings, such as attacks in schools, workplaces, places of worship, entertainment venues or public streets
* family or domestic mass killings
* gang, organised-crime or dispute-related shootings
* terrorist attacks involving firearms
* active shooter incidents where police and emergency services must respond to an ongoing threat
# Columbine High School massacre (1999) in Colorado, United States: [[Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold|Two students]] opened fire, killing 12 students and a teacher before taking their own lives.
# Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting (2012) in Connecticut, United States: A [[Adam Lanza|gunman]] killed 20 young children and six staff members.
# Las Vegas shooting (2017) in Nevada, United States: A [[Stephen Paddock|lone shooter]] opened fire from a hotel room, killing 58 people and injuring hundreds during a music festival.
# Christchurch mosque shootings (2019) in New Zealand: A [[Brenton Tarrant|white supremacist]] targeted two mosques, killing 51 worshippers and injuring many others.
These categories matter because the motives, warning signs, weapons, targets and prevention options can differ. A single headline category can hide important differences between incidents.
== Gun Control and Mental Health ==
Mass shootings have sparked ongoing debates and discussions surrounding gun control measures and mental health policies. These discussions aim to strike a balance between preserving individual liberties and ensuring public safety. Different countries have implemented various approaches, ranging from stricter gun regulations to enhanced mental health support and early intervention programs.
== Causes and Risk Factors ==
Mass shootings do not have one simple cause. Common factors include grievance, fixation on previous attacks, suicidal intent, access to firearms, leakage of threats, domestic abuse, extremist ideology, workplace conflict, school conflict, fame-seeking, and severe personal crisis.
== Societal Impact ==
Mass shootings have a profound impact on affected communities and society as a whole:
Mental health is often discussed after mass shootings, but it should be handled carefully. Some attackers have had mental health problems, but most people with mental illness are not violent. Treating mental illness as the main explanation can distort the issue and stigmatise people who are already more likely to need support than suspicion.
# Loss of Lives and Trauma: Mass shootings result in the tragic loss of innocent lives, causing immeasurable grief and trauma for survivors, families, and communities.
# Security Measures and Preparedness: Incidents of mass shootings have led to increased security measures and the development of emergency response protocols in various public spaces.
# Advocacy for Change: Survivors, families, and advocacy groups often mobilize to promote gun control measures, mental health support, and social interventions aimed at preventing future acts of violence.
# Media and Public Discourse: Mass shootings prompt discussions on topics such as gun violence, mental health awareness, media coverage ethics, and the influence of violent media on society.
Access to firearms affects the scale and speed of an attack. High-capacity weapons, spare ammunition, poor storage and easy access can increase lethality. At the same time, weapon access is not the only factor. Planning, target choice, emergency response, warning signs and social context also matter.
== Copycat and Contagion Effects ==
Some attackers study previous mass killings. They may imitate methods, dates, clothing, writings, livestreaming, manifesto language or target choices. This is why many journalists, researchers and prevention groups recommend limiting repeated use of attackers' names and images, avoiding unnecessary detail about methods, and focusing more on victims, survivors and prevention.
Online spaces can amplify this problem. Attackers may seek status in extremist or nihilistic communities, trade old attack material, or try to create content designed for spread after death or arrest. Moderation, reporting pathways and rapid removal of attack footage can reduce the reach of that material.
== Notable Incidents ==
Mass shootings occur in many countries, although patterns differ by law, culture and weapon availability. Widely discussed examples include:
* the Columbine High School attack in Colorado in 1999, carried out by [[Eric_Harris_and_Dylan_Klebold]]
* the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting in Connecticut in 2012, carried out by [[Adam_Lanza]]
* the Las Vegas shooting in Nevada in 2017, carried out by [[Stephen_Paddock]]
* the Christchurch mosque attacks in New Zealand in 2019, carried out by [[Brenton_Tarrant]]
Examples should not be treated as a ranking or a script. The main value of studying these cases is to understand warning signs, emergency response, survivor needs, policy failures and ways to reduce future harm.
== Prevention and Response ==
Prevention usually works best when it combines several approaches. Threat assessment teams can act when a person leaks intent, makes threats, fixates on violence or shows escalating grievance. Secure firearm storage can reduce access by people in crisis. Domestic abuse intervention can matter because a number of mass killings begin in a family or intimate-partner setting.
Emergency response has also changed. Schools, workplaces and public venues often use lockdown procedures, evacuation plans, communication systems and trauma training. Police tactics in active shooter incidents have shifted towards rapid engagement of the attacker when the threat is ongoing.
After an attack, communities need medical care, mental health support, victim services, accurate information and long-term help. The effects can last for years, including injuries, bereavement, post-traumatic stress, disability, litigation, memorial disputes and policy arguments.
== Public Debate ==
Mass shootings often lead to debate about firearms law, policing, school security, mental health services, online extremism, media coverage, domestic violence, and civil liberties. These debates can become highly polarised, especially in the United States.
Good analysis separates evidence from slogans. It asks what type of incident is being discussed, which interventions have evidence behind them, which rights are affected, and whether proposed changes would have applied to the facts of the attack.
== See Also ==
* [[Eric_Harris_and_Dylan_Klebold]]
* [[Adam_Lanza]]
* [[Brenton_Tarrant]]
* [[Stephen_Paddock]]
* [[Police_officer]]
== References ==
* [https://www.fbi.gov/file-repository/reports-and-publications/2024-active-shooter-report/view FBI: Active Shooter Incidents in the United States in 2024]
* [https://www.britannica.com/topic/mass-shooting Britannica: Mass shooting]
* [https://portal.ct.gov/-/media/OCA/SandyHook11212014pdf.pdf Connecticut Office of the Child Advocate: Shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School]
* [https://christchurchattack.royalcommission.nz/the-report/executive-summary-2/executive-summary Royal Commission of Inquiry: Christchurch attack executive summary]
[[Category:Crime]]
[[Category:Law]]
[[Category:Public Safety]]