JJIE Hub: The Problem — Youth Gun Violence Prevention

Youth Gun Violence Data and Statistics 

Find individual resources about The Problem below. Scroll down to see subtopics. Click on the plus sign for a summary of each resource. Click on the titles to access the full resource in a new tab.

Gun Violence in the US Territories

The epidemic of gun violence in the USVI and Puerto Rico has been ignored for too long. Sourced from a combination of academic research articles, the federal government, territorial governments, and locally collected data this report describes the extent of gun violence in both the US territories well as its social, political, and historical contexts.

Report on Indicators of School Crime and Safety: 2021

The annual Report on Indicators of School Crime and Safety includes data sources supported by the federal government and provides accurate information about the nature, extent, and scope of gun violence in U.S. school systems. The report includes the most up-to-date Information on the number of students found with firearms on school grounds or threatening others with a weapon.

Gun Violence Archive

The Gun Violence Archive (GVA) is a nonprofit corporation and research group with an online database of up-to-date statistics on gun violence incidents. Since 2013, they have collected data from over 7,500 law enforcement, media, and commercial sources every day in order to issue real-time verified data to those who need it for their research, writing, or advocacy. The archive features a section of reports containing data specific to different demographics, including, but not limited to: children (ages 0-11), teens (ages 12-17), officer-involved shootings, and mass shootings. The GVA reports on those killed, and injured, as well as accidental injuries and deaths.

Gun Violence in America: an Analysis of 2018 CDC Data

The Educational Fund to Stop Gun Violence (EFSGV) analyzes the CDC’s 2018 data on gun violence in the United States. It outlines the data from gun deaths in 2018 and shows the trends over 10 years. The data is sourced from the Centers for Disease Control’s Underlying Cause of Death database and the Wide-ranging Online Data for Epidemiologic Research (WONDER) database. The report includes data on a variety of categories including firearm homicide, firearm suicide, gun deaths among children and teens, as well as trends and averages. A few of the major findings of this report conclude that in 2018, a total of 39,740 Americans died due to gun violence, 3,342 of which were children and teens (ages 0-19). That translates to 9 children and teens each day. They also found an increase in the number of firearm suicide deaths, which continues the trend of annual increases since 2006.

Firearm Justifiable Homicides and Non-Fatal Self-Defense Gun Use: An Analysis of Federal Bureau of Investigation and National Crime Victimization Survey Data

This report from The Violence Policy Center (VPC) analyzes data from the Federal Bureau of Investigation and National Crime Victimization Survey which shows relatively low numbers of justifiable homicides between the years 2013 and 2017. The report presents the use of firearms in justifiable homicide data at both the national and state level, and the sum total of times firearms were used in self-defense by victims involved in attempted and completed violent crimes and property crimes. It also includes information on the relationship of the person killed to the shooter, the sex and race of both shooter and the person killed, and the types of firearms used. The data and conclusions presented in the report directly challenge the claims of the gun lobby and gun industry regarding firearms and self-defense.

Gun Violence and Youth

This literature review from the Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention (OJJDP) focuses primarily on intentional gun violence pertaining to youths (ages 10-24), which includes homicides, nonfatal injuries, suicides, community violence, and school violence. It explores the scope of the problem, protective factors against youth gun violence, policy research on firearms, and the outcome evidence of programs. The review points to promising strategies to reduce gun violence, such as community interventions, hot spot policing practices, and weapon ban laws.

This report from the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) details policy statements on firearm-related injuries affecting the pediatric population. The report provides information on the scope of the problem, as well as data on suicide, homicide, unintentional firearm-related deaths, non-fatal firearm injuries, and prevention strategies. The AAP concludes its report with a summary of policy recommendations regarding prevention, health information for parents, funding, and education.

Suicide By Firearm Fact Sheet

This short fact sheet from the Education Fund to Stop Gun Violence (EFSGV) shows that suicide by firearm was the leading cause of violent death in the United States in 2016. The fact sheet includes information about access to firearms, the lethality of firearms, and policies and practices for temporarily removing firearms in order to help prevent suicide.

Youth Violence: What We Know and What We Need to Know

In this review from the American Psychologist, Bushman and colleagues systematically investigate existing research on youth gun violence to determine what is known about the causes and characteristics of violent acts among youth. Using data gathered from a comprehensive analysis of rampage shootings between 1974 and 2011, the authors present a framework of characteristics for rampage shooters and incidences. They also outline characteristics of street shooters and incidences using a decades-long database of social science research on street shootings.

The authors note that youth violence is a complex issue with many causes that can differ in salience depending on the context and youth involved. While there are both risk factors and protective influences throughout a child’s life, the research is more extensive on the influence of risk factors. This article analyzes and outlines both risk factors and protective influences that involve family life, neurobiology, school life, personality traits, exposure to violence, access to guns, substance abuse, social rejection, poverty, and mental illness; both protective influences and risk factors are affected by these parts of a child’s life.

A review of research on prevention initiatives and strategies includes using social data-mining algorithms to monitor those children who are at risk of violent behavior; although, this method could raise privacy concerns. The use of student tip lines have been effective in preventing rampage shootings. Preventing street shootings takes a coordinated effort between community leaders, law enforcement, and role models to be most effective.

In conclusion, the authors discuss directions for future research and the effects on society from both kinds of shootings; rampage shootings are rare, but highly publicized events that shake society. Street shootings are much more common but isolated to specific types of environments. The authors declare that preventing both types of youth violence through scientific investigation of causes and solutions is a national priority.

Childhood Firearm Injuries in the United States

This article appearing in the American Academy of Pediatrics journal Pediatrics presents the most recent and comprehensive analysis of firearm-related injuries and deaths of US children to date. Using data from the National Vital Statistics System (NVSS), the National Electronic Injury Surveillance System (NEISS), and the National Violent Death Reporting System (NVDRS), Katherine Fowler and colleagues measured patterns of firearm-related death and injury (including suicide) by type, trends over time, circumstance and incident characteristics, and state-level data for the years 2002-2014.

Their results show firearm violence as the third-leading cause of death among children aged 0-17 years old, and the second-leading cause of injury-related death in the same age range (surpassed only by motor vehicle accidents). During the years 2002-2014, 19 children died from or were treated for gunshot wounds in an emergency room. Of all high-income countries in the world, the United States is responsible for 91% of childhood firearm deaths. Further, an average of 8 out of 100,000 children were injured every year by firearms in the US during the years 2002-2014. These results clearly illustrate the growing public health concern for youth gun violence in the United States.

Characteristics of School-Associated Youth Homicides — United States, 1994–2018

This report from the Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)’s Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report (MMWR) series finds that 70.4% of all school-associated youth homicides between 1994 and 2016 were committed with a firearm. The report includes an analysis of 431 single and multiple-victim school-associated homicides among youth aged 5-18 years old based on coding and analysis of interviews, police reports, and media articles between 1994-2018.

According to the report, the majority of victims in single-victim cases were African American males between the ages of 15 and 18, while the majority of single-victim perpetrators were African American and Hispanic males between the ages of 15 and 18. Urban, public high schools had the highest frequency of single-victim, school-associated youth homicides. Gang retaliation and interpersonal disputes were the most frequent motivations. In comparison, victims of multiple-victim youth homicides were more equally represented between males and females. Noticeably, more multiple-victim homicides happened in the 5-14 age group than in single-victim incidents. The majority of victims in multiple-victim homicides were white youth; the perpetrators were primarily white males between the ages of 15 and 18. Retaliation was the most common motivation, and perpetrators were typically schoolmates or strangers.

The report concludes with the implication that racial/ethnic minority school youth are at a higher risk for being homicide victims than white youth,. and that school homicides happen with greater frequency in urban areas. This similarity in characteristics of school-associated and non-school-associated youth homicides indicates a need for broader, community-wide prevention initiatives that go beyond the school setting.

Firearm Homicides and Suicides in Major Metropolitan Areas — United States: 2012–2013 and 2015–2016

Firearm-related homicide and suicide rates are on the rise according to this report from the Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)’s Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report (MMWR) series. Analyzing recent data from the 50 most populated metropolitan areas of the US, the report finds that 3224 youth between the ages of 10 and 19 were killed in a firearm-related homicide and 2118 died in a firearm-related suicide in 2015-2016, with 87% of all youth homicides and 42% of all youth suicides involving a gun.

Contrary to a previous trend, firearm-related homicide and suicide rates are now increasing. The youth firearm-related homicide is up from a combined rate of 4.3 in the metropolitan areas measured in 2012-2013 to 4.7 in 2015-2016. The youth firearm-related suicide rate is up from 1.5 to 1.9. The authors say it is too soon to say if this is a short-term fluctuation or the beginning of a longer trend.

The report concludes by stressing the importance of ongoing tracking of gun violence rates as a way of supporting prevention efforts. For instance, safe gun storage is key to limiting children’s access to guns. Research has also shown that initiatives for housing and preventive policies in schools have reduced youth suicide rates. Further, rebuilding and improving the physical and social environments of urban areas has been shown to significantly reduce firearm-related homicides.

Household Gun Ownership and Youth Suicide Rates at the State Level, 2005−2015

In this article from Michael Siegel and colleagues in the American Journal of Preventive Medicine, the authors find empirical evidence that household gun ownership is a significant factor contributing to youth suicide rates. According to the data analyzed in the study, 55% of the variation in youth suicide rates from state to state is explained by the variation in household gun ownership. The authors find that in states with the highest youth suicide rates, 52.5% of households had firearms; while in states with the lowest youth suicide rates, just 20% of households had firearms.

Suicide is the most common type of firearm-related death in the US, and an average of three children commit suicide daily. Previous research has reported a positive relationship between household gun ownership and suicide rates at the state level, but until now, none have examined youth suicide rates in relation to household gun ownership by controlling for state differences.

Drawing on household gun ownership data from a nationally representative sample of over 300,000 adults, the authors compare household gun ownership at the state level with data on youth suicide rates and self-reported youth suicide attempts at the state level. The study controlled for the known risks and socioeconomic factors that have been shown to affect youth suicide rates. In other words, the study presents convincing evidence that household gun ownership is an important factor contributing to youth suicides.

High School Youths, Weapons, and Violence: A National Survey

This research brief from the National Institute of Justice presents results from a national survey conducted in 1996 by Joseph Sheley and James Wright investigating the firearm and crime-related activities of 734 male sophomores and juniors from 53 high schools nationwide. This survey was unique for its time because it asked questions specific to weapon exposure among non-delinquent American high schoolers in an effort to get closer to the experience of the “average” American juvenile with respect to firearms.

Among the youth sampled, only 29% had possession of at least one gun, and only 6% carried a gun outside of the home. Of this 6%, the majority carried their gun in a car, and half were automatic or semi-automatic handguns. The recreational use of guns was linked with possession of all kinds of firearms, but not related to status enhancement, criminality, or high-risk environments. Half the youth who responded believed it would be easy to obtain a gun. 48% of these were gifted or loaned a gun by friends and/or family. Of the 35% who had bought a gun, 53% bought one from a family member or friend.

While criminality was only characteristic of a small percentage of the sample, it was positively correlated with youth who possessed and carried automatic or semi-automatic handguns. Possession of automatic or semi-automatic handguns and carrying guns outside the home were positively correlated with youth who experienced all of the nine dangerous environment items in the survey. Of the youth who had carried guns, 43% felt they needed them for protection. The authors note that the majority of the students surveyed did not live in ‘truly’ unsafe conditions, but the fear of these conditions was present. The data indicate a stronger link between dangerous firearm-related activity and firearm possession in dangerous environments than it does for firearm possession alone.

How Youthful Offenders Perceive Gun Violence

In this briefing from 1999, the National Institute of Justice funded RAND to conduct interviews with 34 incarcerated youth from the Los Angeles Juvenile Hall to determine their perceptions surrounding their use of firearms. The main focus of this study was to measure youth perception about their future and their choices in reference to gun violence in order to identify deterrence strategies. Interviewers presented the youth with a hypothetical scenario including an opportunity to shoot someone to explore the context and rationale behind their decisions.

The report finds a positive correlation between gang membership and gun use among the youth interviewed. 76% of the youth had been involved in gangs; however, 52% expressed the desire to leave them. 75% had fired a gun, and 85% of the youth had previously been in Juvenile Hall. Six of these youths had been charged with gun possession, four had committed murder, and five had shot at people without getting caught. About half of these juveniles thought their future survival was left to chance. 40% of the youth believed that neither police nor their gang could protect them on the streets like a gun could, and most perceived the world outside their neighborhood to be even more dangerous.

Despite these figures, the youth interviewed still tended to believe they had a choice to carry and/or use a gun. They also had positive expectations about their future education and employment, which was recognized as a way to get out of their neighborhood and into a better life. The study identified two common perceptions relevant to deterring gun violence among LA youth 1)that shooting is a choice and 2) that shooting results in negative consequences such as arrest, imprisonment, and death. Based on this, the report concludes that points of influence for reducing gun violence include changing norms concerning gun violence and building on the youth’s strengths to offer education and other resources they need.

The Epidemiology of Firearm Violence in the Twenty-First Century United States.

The total cost of firearm violence to US society was 174 billion dollars in 2010. In this brief from the Annual Review of Public Health, the basic epidemiology of firearm violence in the US is presented. Using data from the CDC’s Web-based Injury Statistics Query and Reporting System, Garen Wintemute breaks down the statistics by trends, current status, and geography.
In 2012, the risk of firearm death was shown to be substantially higher for adolescents by homicide and the elderly by suicide. Firearm homicide risk is greatest for Black males, with Black females experiencing a higher rate of homicide than White and Hispanic males. Firearm suicide risk is greatest for White males, with White females experiencing a higher rate of suicide than both Black and Hispanic males. In 2004 there was little difference in overall firearm fatality between rural and urban areas; however, the rate of homicide was 90% higher in urban than rural areas, and the rate of suicide was 54% higher in rural than urban areas.

Wintemute discusses further how the epidemiology of firearm violence exposes misconceptions that hinder policy efforts to address this public health issue. For instance, mental illness by itself does not significantly contribute to interpersonal firearm violence; other factors, such as substance abuse or a history of violence are usually present along with a mental illness. Following the epidemiology of firearm violence can focus national efforts toward interventions with more effective results. Research funding is increasing, and evidence-based interventions are sorely needed; firearm-related deaths in the US from 2003-2012 outnumber the US combat fatalities from World War II, and the combined combat fatalities from all other wars in the nation’s history. Scientific inquiry, in-line with modern disease control methods, is necessary if the nation is going to curb this crisis.

Gun Violence and Youth Literature Review 

A 2016 literature review finds there are around 7,920 gun-related deaths involving youths every year in the United States. The review, compiled as part of the OJJDP Model Programs Guide, focuses on intentional gun violence involving youths ages 10-24 and draws from a variety of scholarly sources. The literature review examines federal and state laws, youth gun suicide, and school shootings among other areas.

JJIE Gun Violence Newsletter signup banner Red & Lavendar

Harms of Youth Gun Violence

The Effect of Local Violence on Children’s Attention and Impulse Control

This research article published in the American Journal of Public Health looks at the impact of homicide in children’s local communities on their attention and impulse control. Using local homicide data from the Chicago Police Department and interview assessments with the children in Head Start programs, researchers (Sharkey et al.) compared the scores of those who were exposed to recent violence in their community to those who had no recent violence in order to explore possible effects. The results reveal that exposure to a local homicide can cause an impairment of children’s self-regulatory behavior and cognitive functioning. Children who were exposed to homicides near their homes showed lower pre-academic skills, levels of attention, and impulse control. The research suggests that this is likely due to parental distress, which may affect young children.

This report from the Violence Policy Center (VPC) details the relationship between community violence and trauma. It presents key concepts and research about trauma through a gun violence lens for members of the gun violence prevention community and policymakers. While noting that there are many understandings of trauma, the report defines it as the “result of experiencing or witnessing chronic and sustained violence, or specific events that can have lasting effects on individuals” and notes that community violence is a distinct type of trauma that includes experiencing or witnessing gun violence. The report gives information on the influence of community violence on a variety of elements such as health, education, economic investment, and criminal justice, among others. It brings to light the effect of trauma and the long-term impacts of living in fear of violence and ends with policy recommendations for policymakers to consider.

The Impact of Gun Violence on Young Children and Teens

This report from Everytown for Gun Safety addressing the impact of gun violence on children and teens contains recent data and statistics on homicide, suicide, unintentional firearm deaths, and gun violence in  American schools. It highlights the disproportionate impacts of gun violence upon different demographic groups, as well as the long-term effects of exposure to gun violence. For example, in Columbus, Ohio, Black children were exposed “to 66 percent more violence on average, than White children” which is one of many statistics demonstrating the disproportionate impacts of gun violence on minority groups. The report ends with policy recommendations for policymakers to consider.

Young Guns: How Gun Violence is Devastating the Millennial Generation

This report from The Center for American Progress and Generation Progress focuses on the devastating effects of gun violence on younger Americans. It includes data showing that young people are disproportionately impacted by gun violence and discusses how they are also more likely to be the offenders of gun violence. It also notes that millennials are becoming more concerned about the presence of guns in their communities. The report concludes by discussing the costs of gun violence, both in terms of mortality rates and economic measures.

Protecting the Next Generation

This report from Gifford’s Law Center to Prevent Gun Violence (https://lawcenter.giffords.org/) includes information on strategies to keep America’s children safe from gun violence. The report is divided into two parts, the first contains information on the substantial impact gun violence has on youth which includes, anxiety, PTSD, the cycle of violence, and economic costs. The second part provides proven solutions to keep youth safe and save lives including policy recommendations and individual action steps.

Risk Factors for Youth Gun Violence

A Comprehensive Technical Package for the Prevention of Youth Violence and Associated Risk Behaviors

Homicide is the third leading cause of death among persons aged 10 to 24 years and the majority of these homicides are from firearm violence. This technical package from the CDC focuses on promoting healthy family environments, quality early childhood education, and an overall positive community to help curb youth gun violence. Overall, the package emphasizes practices of primary prevention or preventing youth violence from ever happening in the first place.

Cradle to Community: A Focus on Community Safety and Healthy Childhood Development

Our communities are safer when our kids are safer. This report by the Prevention Institute and the Center for the Study of Social Policy explores the political, social and cultural opportunities to create safe communities focused on positive early childhood development. The report offers suggestions on using a shared framework between childhood development practices and community safety approaches, as well as examples of community successes of these efforts in action.

Childhood Trauma Exposure and Gun Violence Risk Factors among Victims of Gun Violence

This research article published in the journal Psychological Trauma recognizes that risk factors for involvement in gun violence have been understudied, and explores whether different types of childhood trauma, such as domestic violence or community violence, are related to increased gun violence involvement and gun violence risk factors. Data were collected by two licensed psychologists through a pre-treatment assessment with gunshot victims who agreed to participate. The participants described their involvement in gun violence and gun violence risk factors, which included gun ownership, gun carrying, gun arrests, impulsivity, and perceptions regarding violence. The results showed that domestic violence and community violence during childhood were associated with increased gun violence involvement and risk factors. The researchers (Wamser-Nanney et al.) conclude that exposure to traumatic events during childhood may be an important risk factor for gun violence involvement.

Gun Violence: Prediction, Prevention, and Policy

This report from the American Psychological Association (APA) was written by an APA panel of experts and includes research-based conclusions and recommendations on how to reduce gun violence in the United States. The report details comprehensive information about antecedents, prevention, and policy for gun violence and notes that gun violence is a complex problem requiring a multifaceted approach to solutions. It includes details about prediction, such as data on gender and culture, prevention, at the individual and community level, and evidence-based policies to reduce gun violence.

Violence is a Contagious Disease

In this excerpt from the Forum of Global Violence Prevention’s Contagion of Violence Workshop, Gary Slutkin (Cure Violence) discusses how violence moves through a population in the same way a contagious disease moves through a population. The goal of this article is to clarify how violence is acquired and biologically processed so that human societies can reduce or even stop the spread of it.

Violence is traditionally filtered through a moral lens, creating the understanding that violent people are inherently bad people. A similar phenomenon happened with leprosy, the plague, and other historical, infectious diseases until microorganisms were discovered, and germ theory was developed. This stereotype of violence = evil increases the intensity with which violence is exposed to certain populations, further contributing to its spread. Through a scientific framework, it is the author's hope that violence can become a disease of the past, much like leprosy.

Drawing on social psychology research and fMRI data, Slutkin presents convincing evidence that violence has biological and social beginnings and can be tracked and remedied much like any other contagion. Violence clusters in spatial locations, there can be a nonlinear spread, and it is transmitted through exposure by a susceptible person. Further, not all people who are exposed to violence develop a disease of violence. Violence as a disease is defined as acts of harm done by a person or to a person. Resistance to the disease can be found through combinations of an individual’s internal or external circumstances and biological traits.

Under this framework, policy can move forward with the help of scientific research to stop the spread of violence, with gun violence being a particularly salient contagion. Initiatives such as the Cure Violence project have reduced the spread of gun violence by following infectious disease protocols: respond to the current exposure; avoid further exposure; treat infected persons and communities. The results of Cure Violence have been replicated cross-culturally, giving evidence that gun violence has universal characteristics that can be utilized to predict and interrupt its transmission.

Association of Firearm Access, Use, and Victimization During Adolescence With Firearm Perpetration During Adulthood

This report from JAMA Network discusses the correlation between firearm use, access, injury, and being threatened with a weapon during adolescence and the likelihood for firearm perpetration and ownership in adulthood. The study shows that amongst the sample of newly detained youth in a temporary juvenile detention center, a startling majority of youth regardless of gender were involved with firearms as adolescents. This study opens the door for future research into the variables that could reduce the likelihood of firearm violence and overall firearm involvement. The study also provides an examination of intergenerational patterns of firearm involvement. Recommendations to reduce firearm injury and death made in this report include increasing funding for firearm violence prevention research, passing laws that impose criminal liability on adults who negligently leave firearms accessible to children, enhancing children’s access to mental health services, limiting ammunition magazines, and reinstating the ban on military-style assault weapons.


Youth Gun Violence Sections

https://jjie.org/jjie-hub/youth-gun-violence/policy-reform-youth-gun-violence-prevention-2/