RT Article T1 Stressed Out and Strapped: Examining the Link Between Psychological Difficulties and Student Weapon Carrying and Use: JF Criminal justice and behavior VO 46 IS 7 SP 980 OP 998 A1 Johnson, Cheryl L. A2 Wilcox, Pamela 1968- A2 Peterson, Samuel LA English YR 2019 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/1703409396 AB Using data on middle-school adolescents from the Rural Substance Abuse and Violence Project (RSVP), the authors examined the extent to which psychological difficulties are related to student weapon carrying and use, net of other criminological variables. Furthermore, the authors examined whether psychological difficulties had variable effects across school contexts. Initial logistic regression models showed that variables tapping psychological difficulties (fear of crime, family history of mental illness, and low self-control) were significantly related to student weapon carrying and use. Once other criminological and demographic controls were added, only low self-control remained significant. Multilevel models incorporating random slope coefficients and cross-level interactions showed that the relationship between low self-control and student weapon carrying/use was attenuated in schools with higher levels of school efficacy and school security. Similarly, the relationship between fear of crime and weapon carrying depended on the level of school security, with the effect weakened as school security increased. K1 Juvenile delinquency K1 Mental health K1 Youth K1 Aggression K1 Behavior DO 10.1177/0093854819826110