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Sweden’s deadliest mass shooting highlights global reality of gun violence, Northeastern criminologist says

“We in the United States don’t have a monopoly on mass shootings,” James Alan Fox says, “though we certainly have more than our share.”

Two police officers outside of Risbergska School standing up against the wall with their guns drawn.
Police responded to the mass shooting Tuesday at the Risbergska School in Sweden. Kicki Nilsson/TT News Agency via AP

Police in Sweden have yet to identify a motive for the worst mass shooting in the country’s history.

The attack at an adult education center in the city of Orebro, which has claimed at least 11 lives — including the suspected assailant — and injured six people is a tragic reminder that mass shootings are not restricted to the United States, a Northeastern University criminologist says. 

“We’ve seen large-scale mass shootings in Russia, Norway, England, Germany and other countries,” says James Alan Fox, a research professor of criminology, law and public policy at Northeastern. “We in the United States don’t have a monopoly on mass shootings, though we certainly have more than our share.”

A study by Fox and his colleagues found that approximately 16% of the world’s mass shootings — not including acts of political terror — were committed in the U.S.

“We have 5% of the world population,” Fox says. “So 16% of mass shootings amounts to about three times our share.”

Portrait of James Alan Fox wearing a blue shirt and tie and a grey suit jacket.
James Alan Fox, research professor of criminology, law and public policy at Northeastern. Photo by Matthew Modoono/Northeastern University

Fox doubts that U.S. mass shootings influence similar tragedies in other countries. 

“If that were the case then you would find shootings elsewhere following more closely in time the shootings in our country,” Fox says. “I wouldn’t necessarily see the shooting in Sweden as a copycat of what we’ve had.”

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