“…However, prior studies on the localized effects of mass shootings have produced inconclusive results: one study finds that individuals who live near such events become more supportive of gun control (Newman and Hartman 2017), but another finds that these effects disappear when an improved geocoding scheme is used (Barney and Schaffner 2019). The only study to date that has investigated whether school shootings influence electoral outcomes finds that they do not (Hassell, Holbein, and Baldwin 2020). The dataset used in this study, however, includes many nonrampage school shootings (e.g., suicides, gang violence on school grounds, and fights that escalated); these eventswhich actually outnumber rampage school shootings -are nonrandom, which makes them less useful statistically and also less likely, theoretically, to produce the sorts of feelings that may cause individuals to change their political behavior.…”