RT Article T1 Won’t You be My Neighbor? Neighborhood Characteristics Associated with Mass Shootings in the USA JF Race and social problems VO 14 IS 3 SP 223 OP 237 A1 Maher, Erin J. A2 Gerlinger, Julie A2 Wood, Alexandra D. A2 Ho, Katherine LA English YR 2022 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/1811759513 AB We measure the association between neighborhood characteristics and mass shootings building on existing research on neighborhoods and social and economic composition and crime. Using publicly available national data from the Gun Violence Archive (2014–2019), we geocoded and merged mass shooting incidents with US Census American Community Survey data. Our bivariate results suggest that census tracts with a mass shooting are more economically disadvantaged and have greater concentrations of black and Hispanic residents. In multivariate models, the association with concentrated disadvantage is no longer significant and the likelihood of a mass shooting increases until the proportion of black residents reaches 80%, at which point the likelihood decreases, controlling for other community characteristics. Further, as the proportion of black residents and the level of disadvantage increase together, the odds of a mass shooting incident in that tract are reduced. To address and prevent mass shootings, an expanded theory of neighborhood crime that incorporates the unique nature of mass shootings needs to consider structural racism, racial dynamics, and protective factors in relationship to economic conditions. K1 Crime K1 Community characteristics K1 Mass shootings K1 gun violence DO 10.1007/s12552-021-09350-3