1. What is the claim/argument/thesis/major finding of the article? (i.e. what is its purpose? what is it trying to convince you of?)
2. What disciplines did the article appeal to/use/integrate?
3. What evidence did the article employ to support its claim/argument/thesis/major finding?
Then: Consider how the findings of the article represent a real world application of interdisciplinary studies. Using specific examples and evidence from the article, explain how an interdisciplinary approach/method/synthesis helped understand the problem or issue in a way that a disciplinary approach or method might not have.
Integrative Theory in Criminology Applied
to the Complex Social Problem of School
Violence
In: Case Studies in Interdisciplinary Research
By: Stuart Henry & Nicole L. Bracy
Pub. Date: 2013
Access Date: January 31, 2021
Publishing Company: SAGE Publications, Inc.
City: Thousand Oaks
Print ISBN: 9781412982481
Online ISBN: 9781483349541
DOI: https://dx.doi.org/10.4135/9781483349541
Print pages: 259-282
© 2012 SAGE Publications, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
This PDF has been generated from SAGE Research Methods. Please note that the pagination of the
online version will vary from the pagination of the print book.
Integrative Theory in Criminology Applied to the Complex Social
Problem of School Violence
StuartHenry
Nicole L.Bracy
Introduction
Interdisciplinarians have been very clear that they are interested in addressing problems, questions, or topics
that are “too broad or complex to be dealt with adequately by a single discipline” (Klein & Newell, 1997, p.
393) and “whose solutions are beyond the scope of a single discipline” (Boix-Mansilla, 2005, p. 16; National
Academies, 2005, p. 39). Single disciplinary approaches “fail to provide the truly comprehensive perspective
on the problem that policymakers and the public really need. On too many issues of public importance, the
disciplines tend to talk past each other” (Repko, 2008, p. 31). The charge of “disciplinary inadequacy” (p.
39) in dealing with complex social problems has been applied to crime by integrative criminologists who, like
interdisciplinarians, are also concerned about the myopic analysis offered by traditional disciplines (Barak,
1998a, 1998b, 2009; Messner, Krohn, & Liska, 1989; Robinson, 2004; Robinson & Beaver, 2009); each
discipline captures a narrow dimension of the crime problem but misses, or dismisses, the contributions of
the rest. As a result, public policies to deal with crime, which themselves derive from disciplinary analyses or
from media-driven fear (Muschert & Peguero, 2010), are also likely to be partial and fail to comprehend the
complexity of the problem.
Multidisciplinary approaches that acknowledge a range of disciplinary perspectives through a process of
“cognitive decentering” (Hursh, Haas, & Moore, 1998; Repko, 2008) are an advance over disciplinary
approaches. Cognitive decentering “is the intellectual capacity to move beyond a single center or focus
(especially the innate tendencies towards egocentrism and ethnocentrism) and consider a variety of other
perspectives in a coordinated way to perceive reality more accurately, process information more
systematically, and solve problems more effectively” (Hursh et al., 1998, p. 37). However multidisciplinarity
rarely looks at the dynamic, interactive, and cumulative effects of the complex problem over time; rather, it
fragments the complexity and fails to comprehend its emergent holistic characteristics. In contrast, integrative
interdisciplinary approaches to addressing complex social problems explicitly engage in “integration,
synthesis, or amalgamation that attempt to produce a ‘comprehensive’ explanation” (Einstadter & Henry,
2006, p. 310) and move us toward holistic policies to address them.
In this chapter, we explore the last steps of Repko's (2008) research process: how to integrate insights
to produce interdisciplinary understanding. We do so by examining the insights of those criminological
theorists who have been attempting to develop integrative theory for the past 30 years. In the first section
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of the chapter, we critically review the issues that have arisen in criminological theory around what should
be integrated from the disciplines beyond simply “insights.” And in the second section, we show how
criminologists striving for an integrated theory have applied this to explain the crime of violence. In the third
section, we sketch out what an interdisciplinary understanding of school violence might look like and indicate
its policy implications.
Creating Common Ground(s) and a Comprehensive Understanding in
Criminology
For readers not familiar with the history of theory development in criminology, it is important to know
that criminology has, from the outset, been profoundly influenced by the theories of other disciplines to
explain why people commit crime, violate laws, or deviate from norms. In this sense, criminology is an
applied science/social science. Theoretical explanations of crime causation range from the theological and
demonological to economic, biological, psychological, sociological, and political; more recently, they also
include a variety of feminist, postmodernist, and social constructionist theories (see Einstadter & Henry, 2006;
Lanier & Henry, 2010). At different times some criminological theories have been more prominent than others,
but rarely are any theoretical explanations completely expunged, with the result that criminology fits Ritzer's
(1975) category of being a “multiparadigmatic” science.
However, since 1979 a subset of criminological theorists has attempted to harness the explanatory and
predictive power of existing theories of crime causation by integrating the concepts and propositions present
in the diverse range of disciplinary-based theories (see especially Akers, 1994; Barak, 1998a, 1998b,
2009; Bernard, 2001; Colvrn, 2000; Colvrn & Pauly, 1983; Elliott, Agerton, & Canter, 1979; Fishbein,
1998; Hagan, 1989; Hawkins & Weis, 1985; Jeffrey, 1990; Johnson, 1979; Messner et al., 1989; Muftić,
2009; Pearson & Werner, 1985; Robinson, 2004; Robinson & Beaver, 2009; Shoemaker, 1996; Tittle,
1995; Vila, 1994). This has been attempted in a variety of ways, which leads to an instructive set of
issues and challenges for interdisciplinary integrative theory. The three dominant positions are advocates,
critics, and moderates. Advocates see distinct advantages in integrating existing discipline-based theories.
Barak (1998b) summarizes these advantages, arguing that criminologists engaging in integration do so
(1) because of a desire to develop central concepts that are common to several theories; (2) to provide
coherence to a bewildering array of fragmented theories, and thereby reduce their number; (3) to achieve
comprehensiveness and completeness, and thereby enhance their explanatory power; (4) to advance
scientific progress and theory development; and (5) to synthesize ideas about crime causation and social
control policy.
In contrast, critics ask whether it is better to have a set of competing theoretical explanations, each of
which responds to a different, but overlapping, set of questions, or whether it is better to combine elements
of several theoretical perspectives into one integrative theory. For example, some critics have argued that
criminological theories should remain “separate and unequal” and that “theory competition” and “competitive
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isolation” are preferable to theoretical integration (Akers, 1994, p. 195; Gibbons, 1994; Hirschi, 1979, 1989).
They claim the idea that integration appears to create a more powerful or more comprehensive explanation
is an illusion often resulting in theoretical confusion (Thornberry, 1989, p. 54).
We argue that these opposing positions need not be mutually exclusive; criminological theories can remain
separate because the separate disciplines illuminate different aspects of the issue, problem, or question, but
there are also potential benefits to be gained from integration (Newell, 2001). Our more moderate position
is that we should not integrate unless there is a measurable benefit from doing so. We maintain that if
integration produces a more comprehensive understanding that is not presently provided by disciplinary
approaches alone, then it is a valuable process. For example, a comprehensive approach to complex social
problems, such as crime, benefits from both disciplinary-based theories competing for the best explanations
and integrative approaches that go beyond the single theoretical approach.
Another contentious issue is whether integration can achieve comprehensive understanding or whether,
because of the increasing number of interdisciplinary combinations, it simply produces a plurality of
comprehensive understandings or competing meta-theories (Einstadter & Henry, 2006; Fuchsman, 2009):
When the conditions for interdisciplinarity exist, there are then a variety of results possible from
efforts to forge a synthesis. There can be full integration, no integration, partial integration, or
multiple integrations. The contending discourses, synthesis, ideological disputes, plural
epistemologies, and fragmentations that occur within disciplines and their subfields also make their
appearance within interdisciplinarity. (Fuchsman, 2009, p. 79)
Under these circumstances, we might argue that the concept of integration as a single coherent entity may not
always be possible; when there are multiple bases for integration (e.g., assumptions, concepts, or theories),
partial integration may be the best that one can achieve, although full integration remains the ideal. Indeed,
one recent review of integrated theories in criminology found that different integrative theories each draw on
2 to 10 of the 14 different discipline-based theories available, and their various combinations have produced
16 different integrative theories (Lanier & Henry, 2010). These come with a variety of indicative names, such
as “integrated social theory,” “integrated structural Marxist theory,” “conceptual integration theory,” “integrative
systems theory,” and “holistic theory.” Moreover, not all discipline-based theories that constitute these new
integrative theories are drawn on equally. The range of inclusions varies from 2, in the case of feminist
criminological theory, to 11 or more in the case of social learning theory and social control theory (Lanier &
Henry, 2010, pp. 382–391). This raises the question of whether theoretical integration should be striving for
comprehensiveness or multiple more-comprehensive understandings and, in criminology, whether the new
set of competing integrative theories provides theoretical clarity or “integrational chaos” (Einstadter & Henry,
2006, pp. 319–320).
Interdisciplinarians, however, might argue that the charge of integrational chaos presumes that there is no
way to adjudicate between competing integrative theories. Newell's (2001) theory of interdisciplinary studies
and Repko's (2008) version of the steps in the interdisciplinary research process both include a final step
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of testing/applying the more comprehensive theory (Boix-Mansilla, 2005). As is the case in classic theory
building, the fit with empirical evidence determines which competing integrative theory is preferable or at least
has more practical value (Bernard, 2001). If multiple integrated theories of crime causation exist, whether
these have been arrived at by partial integration or by the integration of elements from different combinations
of root disciplines, the key issue is which stands up to the evidence. As a further test, we might ask which
of the different “comprehensive policies” produced by each of these different integrative theories lowers the
incidence of a particular crime. In short, which comprehensive policy works best when it is implemented?
Another approach to the issue of creating more comprehensive theory comes from addressing what,
precisely, is being integrated. In the criminological literature, there are four different ways that integration
in criminological theory has occurred: (1) conceptual integration; (2) propositional integration; (3) causal
integration; and (4) cross-level integration (Einstadter & Henry, 2006; Hirschi, 1979; Liska, Krohn, & Messner,
1989). When considering the meaning of these various integrations, it is important to be clear that social
science theorists (like their natural science counterparts) typically see theories as assertions about
relationships among variables. Different theories may have some variables in common, but they can be
distinguished by the differences in the variables they interconnect and by the assumptions about causal
relationships between the variables. There is no reason an integrative theory cannot include a wider array
of variables and provide a somewhat different explanation (from those contained in any of the theories
from which it derives its variables) for why those variables are included and how they are interconnected.
Here, a variable is a measurable way of operationalizing an abstract or general concept; a variable is
either in an equation or it isn't. For example, we might want to look at the range of variables derived from
different theories that have been empirically demonstrated to correlate with the propensity of juveniles to
join gangs. We might include neighborhood housing density, age, criminality of parent or siblings, degree of
neighborhood disorganization, and neighborhood transience rates. These variables may be interconnected
in different ways. Theories that claim community shapes the opportunities available for adolescents to make
delinquent decisions present a different set of interconnections than those that claim that only juveniles who
are predisposed to sensation-seeking behavior due to biological or psychological developmental processes
will act on environmental opportunities. In this individual-level predisposition case, we might be including
variables such as adolescent brain development, domestic abuse, traumatic brain syndrome, high sugar
consumption, addictive personality, and so on. Clearly, therefore, a different comprehensive understanding
would emerge, based on an integration of variables located at the micro-level of analysis (i.e., at the level of
the individual), than if we integrated elements of theory based at the macro-level of analysis (i.e., at the level
of the community and society) because the latter would embody the former and arguably shape its internal
relations/dynamics. So the decision about the nature of the interconnections between variables affects which
concepts are integrated from the different discipline-based theories.
Conceptual Integration
In order to achieve conceptual integration toward a more comprehensive understanding, concepts from
different disciplines first need to be reconciled through redefinition, extension, organization, or transformation.
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This conceptual reconciliation is a step prior to the integration process (Step 8, creating common ground,
rather than Step 9, integrating insights into a more comprehensive understanding, in Repko's [2008] schema).
As we have previously argued, “integrating concepts involves finding those that have similar meanings in
different theories and merging them into a common language” (Einstadter & Henry, 2006, p. 316). This
technique of redefinition in interdisciplinary studies, referred to as “textual integration” (Brown, 1989), is one
of the foundations for creating common ground. Abstractly, theories are generally built up from concepts, or
kernels of ideas, that theorists then link together into explanations for events or phenomena. For example,
high levels of immigration into cities combined with profit-seeking landlords leads to poor quality, low rent,
multifamily inner-city housing with high resident turnover; the resultant neighborhood instability fragments
communities, resulting in a breakdown of informal networks of social control. Fearful of being victimized,
youth band together for self-protection, forming subcultures that can become territorial gangs that protect
their members by instilling fear in nongang or other gang members. They maintain autonomy by engaging in
a variety of delinquency, such as vandalism and drug dealing (i.e., the social disorganization theory of gang
formation).
In practice, many theories start with others' explanations that they modify by creating concepts to fit, or by
borrowing concepts from other theories. For example, the concept of social learning added to the theory of
social disorganization extends its explanatory power. It explains intergenerational gangs by showing that gang
members develop powerful rationalizations to justify their existence; define crime and violence as necessary
for survival; and pass the knowledge, skills, and markets on to new gang members. Once a gang is formed
in a neighborhood, youth can be socialized into the gang's subculture.
In creating common ground, then, the separate disciplinary “languages” (really, definitions of terms) reflect the
differences as well as the similarities in meanings of related concepts. Those differences, in turn, reflect what
distinguishes one discipline from another: most generally, its perspective or worldview. Merging concepts is
not the simple task of focusing on similarities and ignoring differences. Rather, it entails figuring out how to
utilize those similarities in a way that retains the integrity of the original concept.
The aim of interdisciplinary integration when creating common ground (Step 8) is to be identifiably responsive
to each disciplinary perspective on which one draws, but to be dominated by none of them. Although this test
for interdisciplinarians normally refers to constructing a more comprehensive understanding, it also applies
to creating common ground (i.e., a concept should be redefined such that it is responsive to the perspective
of the discipline into the domain of which the concept is entering). For example, Akers's (1994) “conceptual
absorption” approach takes concepts from social learning and social control theory (among others) and
merges them. The control theory concept of “belief,” which refers to a person's moral conviction for or
against delinquency, is equated to learning theory's “definitions favorable or unfavorable to crime” (differential
association). It is interesting that there are parallels here to the theory of human cognitive practice known
as “conceptual blending,” in which humans subconsciously integrate elements and relations from diverse
situations to create new concepts, a process seen by some as being at the heart of the creative process
(Fauconnier & Turner, 2002; Turner & Fauconnier, 1995).
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Although ultimately conceptual integration may distort, even transform, a disciplinary concept in creating a
new or blended concept (Lanier & Henry, 2004, p. 342), that need not be a disadvantage so long as it does
not engage in a reductionist practice, that is, to lose the integrity of the original idea through oversimplification
(during Step 9 of creating a more comprehensive understanding). The appropriate test is not to remain true
to disciplinary intent, but to faithfully capture the meaning of the aspect of the concept that will be utilized—its
kernel of truth or essential idea. A disciplinarian should be able to look at a redefined or extended concept,
for example, and agree that the part of the concept of interest to the interdisciplinarian has been accurately
and adequately captured.
Propositional Integration
Having created the common ground through conceptual integration, we can now move to Step 9, creating
a comprehensive understanding. If we take theoretical propositions to refer to the interconnections or
relationship between two or more variables, or among a specific (and usually small) set of variables, then
at least some theoretical propositions must be integrated in order to construct an integrated theory. If one
of those variables is also included in the causal explanations of another discipline, propositional integration
could involve the addition of another equation to a system of simultaneous equations or another independent
variable to a single equation. Propositional integration “refers to combining propositions from theories or
placing them in some causal order or sequence” (Lanier & Henry, 2004, p. 343) or what might simply be called
organizing them logically.
Propositional integration is a more formal effort because it entails linking the propositions and not
just the concepts of two or more theories into a combined theory. … Rather than simply usurpation,
a propositionally integrated theory must actually meaningfully connect or relate the propositions of
different theories into the new theory. (Paternoster & Bachman, 2001, p. 307)
Shoemaker (1996, p. 254) has observed that propositional integration can quickly result in an exponential
increase in the number of variables, making the testing of integrative theory impractical because of the sample
size necessary. However, this may be appropriate—the causal factors interacting to produce crime may
indeed be numerous—but it is not inevitable: Interdisciplinarians may come to realize that some variables
from one discipline are being used without much success to explain an aspect of crime that is much better
explained by another discipline. Those variables would then be supplanted in the more comprehensive theory
by variables from the other discipline or disciplines. Along this line of thinking, Robinson (2004, pp. x–xi)
advocates building integrative theory by examining the tested contribution to our understanding of crime
made by “risk factors” derived from each discipline, “illustrating how risk factors at different levels of analysis
from different academic disciplines interact to increase the probability that a person will commit anti-social
behavior” (Robinson, 2004, p. 271). It is important to note that Robinson is disaggregating these “risk factors”
from their discipline-based theories and applying the test of whether they contribute to the new integrated
theory based on their empirical veracity, then combining them into a new integrative explanation for why
people engage in crime, or why they engage in a particular kind of crime.
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Here, we are considering what is the most appropriate mechanism or method of integrating selected theories
to produce a more comprehensive understanding (Step 9). For example, is integration to take the form of
one grand theory? Does integration assume a sequential, “end-to-end” process, in which various theories
kick in at different stages? Does the mechanism of integration seek to provide a transcendent approach,
leaving the individual theories to deal with specifics? Does the mechanism used for integration discuss the
interrelationship between the component theories, showing how each of the dimensions relates, or do the
integrated propositions vary depending on which crime/offender/situation is being analyzed?
Liska et al. (1989, pp. 5–15), drawing on Hirschi (1979), suggest that a key issue in generating a
comprehensive understanding through integrating theory is to consider how theoretical propositions are
logically related. They describe three types of relationships, though others could also be envisioned: (1)
end-to-end or sequential integration, which implies a sequential causal order; (2) side-by-side or horizontal
integration, which implies overlapping influences; or (3) up-and-down or vertical integration, which “refers
to identifying a level of abstraction or generality that encompasses much of the conceptualization of the
constituent theories” (Bernard & Snipes, 1996; Messner et al., 1989, p. 5). The danger of up-and-down
propositional integration, in which one theory is subsumed by another that is claimed to be more general
in its explanatory power while incorporating the explanatory power of its constituent theories, is that it can
rapidly become an example of reductionism. However, in its less-often used synthetic form, it holds significant
promise, which is discussed below.
First, end-to-end or sequential integration links the immediate cause of crime to a more distant cause of
crime and then links that to an even more distant cause. For example, an arrest for gang violence might
be the outcome of the following process of sequential causes over time: Biological deficits at birth may lead
to low IQ, which leads to learning disabilities in early childhood, which may lead to an inability to follow
social norms, which may lead to group and institutional exclusion, which produces reduced self-esteem and
alienation, which generates anger and hostility that results in affiliations with similarly alienated peers, which
leads to delinquent peer or gang formation, which leads to law violation, which is reacted to by authorities,
producing criminal justice intervention and stigmatization, which results in an arrest for gang violence. In
this illustration, an arrest for gang violence is explained by a series of theoretical propositions drawn from
labeling theory, subcultural theory, learning theory, cognitive theory, and biological or genetic theory. No one
theoretical explanation explains the whole sequence, but linked end-to-end they may do so.
Second, in side-by-side or horizontal integration, each of the theories integrated explains a different aspect of
the phenomenon, in this case different kinds of crime or different types of criminal. So, one theory may explain
one type of crime, such as organizational (white-collar) crime, while another will explain violent crime such as
robbery, and yet another theory will explain workplace crime, and so on (Gibbons & Farr, 2001; Moffitt, 1993).
Added together, the collection of theories explains a variety of crimes, and it is also possible that two or more
theories may explain the same type of crime. For example, some acts of sexual assault may be explained by
self-control theory, which argues that such crimes are the result of a predisposition to sensation seeking and
the desire for immediate gratification, but sexual assault may also be explained by social learning theory and
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low self-esteem as a result of the offender being a victim of childhood sexual abuse. Of course, the question
this raises is whether two acts defined by law as the same crime are actually the same or different behaviors.
If different, then each theory would be explaining a different act, even though the law classifies them as the
same with regard to the harm and consequences for the victim.
In side-by-side integration, “the integrated typological theory is simply all the separate explanations of crime
combined” (Paternoster & Bachman, 2001, p. 308). Alternatively, one theory may explain one type of offender.
A good illustration of this is provided by Terri Moffitt's (1993, 2003) theory of two types of offender: adolescent-
limited offenders have a pattern of extreme antisocial behavior during adolescence, which they mature out of
by early adulthood. In contrast, life-course-persistent offenders exhibit criminal activity across their life course.
She argues that a different causal explanation is needed to explain the two types of offender.
[Side-by-side integration addresses the] scope of theoretical explanation and whether the integration
is intended to explain crime in general or a specific type of crime, or whether it is intended to
explain a specific kind of motivation across a range of different crimes. Is it intended to apply to the
population in general or only certain sectors of it (e.g., young, old, men, women, African American,
Hispanic)? Is it intended to apply in all situations or is it situationally specific? (Einstadter & Henry,
2006, p. 318)
Finally, up-and-down or deductive integration attempts to explain crime by generalizing from a range of
constitutive theoretical explanations. The synthetic form of up-and-down integration is consistent with the
aim of developing an integrative comprehensive understanding. It involves creating a theory of sufficient
generality that incorporates multiple propositions from constitutive theories, each of which explains a part of
the process that is the crime. The difference between this and the other forms of propositional integration
is that each of the explanations plays a part in explaining the whole crime event, but none alone explains
the whole event. Consider again the example of delinquency. Several different theories offer explanations
for why adolescents engage in delinquent acts. Control theory, for example, has a key concept of parental
attachment, which is inversely related to delinquency (assuming parents are themselves moral and law
abiding). When lack of parental attachment is combined with other elements, such as low commitment to
convention and lack of involvement in conventional activities, an adolescent may do poorly in school. Conflict
theory, as well as developmental theory, argues that family conflict can arise from a variety of internal
family dynamics or external societal pressures and can produce alienation of the adolescent from his or
her family. Low commitment to convention can also lead to underachieving in school, which in turn can
exacerbate conflict and alienation in the family. Social disorganization also contributes to the alienation of
some adolescents from their parents, due to a lack of identification, and social learning theory shows how
alienated and underachieving students can identify more directly with underachieving peers, which in turn can
create more alienation and further underachievement, as well as lead to deviant and law-breaking activity. A
synthetic version of up-and-down integrated theory would argue that none of these theoretical propositions
alone explains delinquency, but taken together they show how delinquency can be the codetermined outcome
from the different propositions acting in the same direction. This is not because one factor causes the other,
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but rather because relations in the family are part of the relations in the school, and relations between peers
are part of the relations of school and family. One does not cause the other to change, but when one changes,
the qualities of the other are changed simultaneously. This leads us to the notion that when we are talking
about integration, different causal relations are implied in each of these models of integration, which suggests
that before integrating, the interdisciplinarian must think hard about how causal factors are related.
Causal Integration
Another key issue affecting the nature of theoretical integration is causality. When developing a theory of
common ground (Step 8) toward a more comprehensive understanding of complex phenomena (Step 9), we
need to recognize that there are different kinds of causal models that describe the relationships between
variables. We can identify a minimum of four kinds of causality: (1) linear causality, which takes the form of
a sequential chain of events; (2) multiple causality, which sees the phenomenon as the outcome of several
different independent causes or a combination of interdependent causes (but see 4 below); (3) interactive
causality, in which the effects of one event influence its cause(s), which then influences the event; and (4)
dialectical or reciprocal causality, in which causes and events are not discrete entities but are overlapping,
interrelated, and codetermining (Barak, 1998a; Einstadter & Henry, 2006; Henry & Milovanovic, 1996). The
difference between interactive causality and reciprocal causality has to do with the way the causes and
events are conceived. In interactive causality, one cause produces an effect, which subsequently acts on the
original cause and affects it in an interactive cycle. In dialectical/reciprocal causality, causes and events are
intertwined such that each is a part of the other. A clear example is the relationship between law and society.
Law is not separate from society or from the social forms, such as family or government, to which it is related:
“Law is integrally constituted in relation to a plurality of social forms” (Fitzpatrick, 1984, p. 115) and “elements
of law are elements of the other social forms, and vice versa” (p. 122). The effect is not independent but
instantaneous because a change in one is simultaneously a change in the other (imagine a Venn diagram).
This presents a challenge to theorists attempting to examine individual causal links in turn. The interactive
and dialectical/reciprocal models of causality suggest a dynamic, rather than static, form of integration, one
that will be of particular interest to interdisciplinarians examining complex phenomena. This typology leads to
a series of questions:
Should different causalities be integrated such that some are dynamic and some static? … Is the
weight given to theories emphasizing a fixed or changing picture of social life? Do most of the
theories combined assume a static or dynamic state? (Einstadter & Henry, 2006, pp. 318–319)
If we were to integrate these models of causality, some (such as those found in the more linear and static
theories) might explain some stages of a phenomenon while others (that are nonlinear and dynamic) might
explain the relationship between stages or how a process evolves over time and across space.
Cross-Level Integration
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Finally, we need to consider the level of integration, meaning whether an integrated theory should address
a micro-, meso-, or macro-level of integration, or integrate across all levels, which is called “cross-level
integration” (Liska et al. 1989; Muftic, 2009). Intuitively, it seems that if comprehensiveness is the goal,
then all three levels (and even a fourth global level) need to be addressed simultaneously in what has
been called “multilevel” integration (Paternoster & Bachman, 2001, p. 305). The integrational levels to be
considered include “(1) kinds of people, their human agency, and their interactive social processes (micro);
(2) kinds of organization, their collective agency, and their organizational processes (meso); and (3) kinds
of culture, structure, and context (macro)” (Einstadter & Henry, 2006, p. 319). An example of cross-level
(macro-micro) integration in criminology is Colvin and Pauly's (1983) attempt to combine Marxist, conflict,
and strain (macro-level) with subculture, social learning, and social control (micro-level) theories. It could
be argued that considering the levels of integration takes us back to Step 1 in the interdisciplinary process,
namely, the identification of the kind of complex problem to be studied, and the distinction between broad and
narrow interdisciplinarity. The question about the appropriate breadth of study perhaps can only appropriately
be answered for a particular instance (of crime, in this case). Still, interdisciplinarians need to be aware of
these questions as they decide on the scope of the particular complex problem they want to study. This is
an important consideration because without an explicit awareness that macro-micro level interactions occur,
it might be seductive to believe that an integration of a range of theories is adequate, without realizing that
macro-level theories have been omitted. For example, the 16 different integrated theories identified by Lanier
and Henry (2010, pp. 385–389) draw on micro-level theories in greater numbers (66%) than they draw on
macro-level theories (33%). Put simply, integration of discipline-based theories in criminology has typically
been biased toward same-level rather than cross-level analyses.
Toward an Integrated Analysis of Violence and School Violence
In this section, we first establish that violence/school violence is a complex problem. Second, we examine the
integrated causal analysis of violence/school violence, arguing that this is best explained using interactive/
reciprocal causal explanations rather than single or multiple independent causality. Third, we argue that a
comprehensive understanding of the phenomenon requires that we examine causation across multiple levels,
and we explain how these levels are interactive and interrelated. Finally, we suggest the kind of policy that
such an integrated reciprocal, multi-level causal analysis would imply.
Violence as a Complex Problem
Leaving aside for the moment the problematic status of “problems,” “problem solving,” and “problem solvers”
(see McCormack, 2009), we need first to decide what makes a problem complex and, indeed, what are
the criteria of complexity. This issue has been addressed in the interdisciplinary studies literature (Meek,
2001; Meek & Newell, 2005; Newell, 2001, 2003), has been incorporated into Step 2 of Repko's (2008)
schema, and has also been explored by scholars seeking to understand the nature of complex problem
solving. For example, according to Funke (1991), building on the work of Dietrich Dörner, a complex problem
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is defined by the following five characteristics: (1) multiple variables and decisions (complexity), that (2)
interact and interrelate in nonlinear, even chaotic and dynamic ways (connectivity), that (3) achieve multiple
goals or outcome states (polytely), that (4) lack clarity of content and meaning (opacity), and that (5)
change over time (variable temporal dynamics), being unpredictable (temporal sensitivity) and yet occurring
in waves (patterned clusters of events). Detombe (1994, 2003) says that complex social problems involve
multiple people and organizations, are characterized by a lack of knowledge and data, and produce uncertain
and often undesired outcomes. She says, “knowledge about the issues involved in the problem normally
belongs to more than one discipline” and “belongs to the subject of study of different domains within one
discipline [inter-domain problems]” (Detombe, 2003). The complexity of the issue reflects the multiple levels
of phenomena that are involved, which can be “viewed from the micro-, meso- or macro-aggregation” levels
and includes “persons, groups, societies, organizations, buildings, education, ministries” (Detombe, 2003).
These entities are interrelated in uncertain dynamic ways, changing over time, with uncertain start and end
points, and often with unexpected or unique outcomes. Definitions of the problem are lacking or conflicting,
and the problem has so far defied a comprehensive understanding, which challenges any simple analysis.
Complex societal interdisciplinary problems are often embedded in a dynamic context (continuously changing
environment), as a result of which the problems change continually. This, combined with the unpredictability
of the effects of interventions, makes it difficult to handle the problem (Detombe, 2003).
To what extent does violence/school violence qualify as a complex social problem, according to these criteria?
Clearly, from the perspective of producing unwanted outcomes, the harms of violence/school violence affect
not only the victims but also the perpetrators, their families, and, in the case of school violence, the school
as an institution, the learning environment, the community, and the wider society. Violence/school violence,
therefore, qualifies as a social problem with multiple and variable negative outcomes. In the case of school
violence, these outcomes are relatively unpredictable, both in their timing and their impact, which is especially
true for the extreme forms, such as rampage shootings (Newman, Fox, Harding, Mehta, & Roth, 2004),
although the outcomes may be less random and more predictable for the continual occurrence of subforms
of violence that permeate urban schools. Indeed, the question of unpredictability is difficult to answer in
general because, although the outcomes of complex systems are not strictly predictable, they are often
quasi-predictable. And they usually produce identifiable patterns of behavior, as can be seen in the research
on patterns of school violence; although those patterns do evolve over time, they don't evolve quickly or
capriciously. The least predictable aspects of complex systems are the bifurcation points at which one pattern
suddenly transforms into another, but those are quite infrequent. A good example here would be when
a school system, such as Columbine, embodies a pattern of repeated bullying over many years, which
transforms into a dramatic rampage shooting as the victims of bullying seek to destroy the school and those
in it. Therefore, we argue that complex systems are relatively unpredictable if we approach them without a
comprehensive understanding of their complexity, which, of course, is the point of an integrative analysis.
It is certainly the case that acts of violence/school violence are often depicted as meaningless random acts
of aggression rather than acts targeted at particular persons or groups. Also, the definition of violence/
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school violence is contested. Some restrict it to any form of physical violence and bullying; others include
psychological and emotional harm through intimidation; and still others include institutional and symbolic
forms of violence as expressions of power and control by teachers, administrators, and politicians (for a
review of these different definitional positions, see Henry, 2000, 2009). Finally, as we reiterate in the next
section, violence/school violence is constituted through multiple causal relationships, operative on micro-,
meso-, or macro-levels of society, from individual through interactive group level, institutional and community
levels, to societal, cultural, and even global levels (Benbenishty & Astor, 2005; Henry, 2009; Muschert, 2007;
Muschert & Peguero, 2010). In short, violence/school violence satisfies the five conditions of complexity,
connectivity, polytely, opacity, and temporality to qualify as a complex interdisciplinary social problem. In the
next section, we argue that violence/school violence has multiple constitutive causal variables that interact
in nonlinear, chaotic, and dynamic ways to produce multiple uncertain but harmful outcomes or events,
themselves subject to change in relation to the changing environments, including being transformed and
accumulating over time.
Integrative Theory in Criminology as an Explanation of Violence/School
Violence
Violence is defined by law as a serious crime:
(a) an offense that has as an element the use, attempted use, or threatened use of physical force
against the person or property of another, or (b) any other offense that is a felony and that, by its
nature, involves a substantial risk that physical force against the person or property of another may
be used in the course of committing the offense. (18 U.S.C. 16)
School violence, because of the age of the victims, is seen as a particularly heinous form of crime and has
a broader definition that includes a wide range of disruptive activities seen as harmful to victims besides
physical and/emotional violence, though its definition is contested (Henry, 2000).
There are approximately 12 different theoretical explanations for crime causation in the criminological
literature, each tied to the following academic disciplines, fields, or schools of thought: economics, biology,
psychology, geography, sociology, social constructionism, political science, philosophy, feminism, and
postmodernism (see Einstadter & Henry, 2006; Lanier & Henry, 2010). However, as we have argued, several
criminologists have recognized the value of taking an integrative approach that incorporates various different
combinations of these causal explanations. Thus, instead of seeing crime through a single disciplinary
framework, or even through multiple paradigms, integrative criminological theorists take an interdisciplinary
approach defined as “the combination of two or more pre-existing theories, selected on the basis of their
perceived commonalities, into a single reformulated theoretical model with greater comprehensiveness
and explanatory value than any one of its component theories” (Farnworth, 1989, p. 95). Hunter and
Dantzker (2002, p. 150), for example, describe “holistic” explanations of crime, which “combine multifactor
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perspectives” allowing “criminologists to see the entire panorama” rather than a one-dimensional picture.
Robinson (2004, 2006; Robinson & Beaver, 2009) has refined the micro-, meso-, and macro-levels of crime
causation while still retaining an overall holistic approach as an “integrated systems perspective.” This theory
“asserts that various criminogenic factors interact among all levels of analysis—cell, organ, organism, group,
community/organization, and society—to produce antisocial and criminal behavior” (Robinson, 2006, p. 322).
Gregg Barak, the author of a foundational book on integrative theory in criminology (1998b), also wrote
Violence and Nonviolence: Pathways to Understanding (2003). Here, Barak points out that in spite of clear
evidence that the causes of violence are cumulatively interrelated across a range of societal levels, most
analyses of violence are “un-reflexive,” about the relationship between causes, or about whether forms of
violence can themselves become causes of violence. This is partly because analysts tend to “focus on one
particular form of violence, without much, if any, reflection on the other forms.” He further argues that “these
fragmented and isolated analyses seek to explain the workings of a given form of violence without trying
to understand the common threads or roots that may link various forms of violence together” (p. 39; see
also Barak, 2006). Critical to our purpose in this chapter is the nature of the links to which he alludes.
In one sense, Barak could be talking about side-to-side linkages of the kind discussed earlier, but he is
actually talking much more about both reciprocal causality and cross-level causality. Indeed, he argues that
causes of violence (and nonviolence) ranging “across the spheres of interpersonal, institutional, and structural
relations as well as across the domains of family, subculture, and culture are cumulative, mutually reinforcing,
and inversely related [emphasis added]” (p. 169), but that “most explanations of the etiology of violence
and nonviolence … emphasize the interpersonal spheres to the virtual exclusion of the institutional and
structural spheres” (p. 155). He argues that we need to take account of the dynamic interrelations of these
different levels in order to understand the pathways to violence (p. 170). Important to his argument is that
occurrences of violence at these different levels can themselves be implicated in the causes of subsequent
acts of violence as the process of violence unfolds over time. Barak (2006) observes that we need to
consider the full range of behavioral motivations and sociocultural constraints that intersect with the spheres
of interpersonal, institutional, and structural communication. This same multilevel, interactive, and reciprocal
analysis of culminating factors can be applied to school violence, and a few scholars have attempted this
approach.
Integrative Analysis of School Violence as a Cumulative Reciprocal
Causal Process
Several researchers studying school violence have noted that a complex set of influences on, or multiple
causes of, school violence operate at the individual, community, and national levels (Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention [CDC], 2008; Garbarino, 1999; Henry, 2000, 2009; Newman et al., 2004). Muschert
(2007), for example, states, “School shooting incidents need to be understood as resulting from a
constellation of contributing causes, none of which is sufficient in itself to explain a shooting” (p. 68). He
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identifies 13 categories of “causes” of school shootings, arguing that “causes may emerge from a variety
of levels, ranging from the individual causes, community contexts, and social/cultural contexts in which
the events occur.” These include (1) “individual” causes such as mental illness, access to guns, peer
relationships, family neglect, or abuse; (2) “community” context such as youth and peer dynamics; (3)
“institutional” contexts such as school-based interaction that encompasses poor student/faculty relationships,
ineffective school administration, inability of communities to respond to delinquency or excessively oppressive
community responses to delinquency, and intolerant community climate; and (4) the “social and cultural” level,
such as the crisis in public school education, gender role violence, conservative religious political climate, gun
culture, and media violence (p. 69).
Some school violence researchers have envisioned these levels not only as interacting but as incorporated,
one in the other, such that the individual is incorporated into the group, which is incorporated into the
society, from micro- to macro-structural levels (Benbenishty & Astor, 2005; Muschert, 2007; Henry, 2000;
Welsh, Greene, & Jenkins, 1999). As Benbenishty and Astor (2005) state, school violence “is the product of
many factors that are associated with multiple levels organized hierarchically (nested like a matryoshka doll):
individual students within classes, classes within schools, schools within neighborhoods, and neighborhoods
within societies and cultures” (p. 113). The problem with this nested analysis is that the metaphor begs the
key question of the nature and strengths of the inter-level linkages.
Henry (2009), applying Barak's (2003) reciprocal cumulative analysis (itself influenced by the work of Moffitt,
2001; Sampson & Laub, 2001; and Colvin, 2000), argued that in order to examine complex social problems
such as school violence, or subsets of it such as rampage school shootings,
we need to take a wide-angle interdisciplinary lens to the nature of what constitutes violence in
schools and retain the connection between school violence and violence at various levels within
the institution of the school and the wider society. We need to consider the range of different
disciplinarily-based explanations in order to assess what each brings to a comprehensive analysis
of school violence. (p. 1248)
He agrees that school violence is a broad phenomenon with multiple manifest forms that together constitute
a continuum of violence. However, he also argues that what is critical is the ways that these causes come
together over time through a culmination process that can produce a dramatic outcome of mass violence or
remain as less violent forms. For example, school shooter Kip Kinkel's repeated victimization by school bullies
escalated into an explosion of violence and rage when the “killer at Thurston High” shot his parents and then
his fellow students. Other students may be subjected to similar repeated abuse that remains internalized as
harm but does not escalate to the crescendo reached in the more extreme cases. Conventional analyses of
school violence explain each subtype of school violence, without recognizing the cumulative interrelations and
interaction between them. Research, however, suggests that violence is a more reciprocal process embedded
in a set of mutually reinforcing ongoing causal chains that lead to episodes of violence on the pathway to
more serious violence (Athens, 1992; Colvin, 2000; Hotaling, Straus, & Lincoln, 1989, as cited by Loeber &
Stouthamer-Loeber, 1998, p. 112; Straus, 1994; Strassberg, Dodge, Pettit, & Bates, 1994).
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A growing body of research indicates that victims of violence are more likely than their peers to also
be perpetrators of violence, and that individuals most likely to be victims of personal crime are those
who report the greatest involvement in delinquent activities. (Siegfried, Ko, & Kelley, 2004)
Similarly, research on school violence shows that violent social interaction between student offenders and
victims can turn some victims into offenders seeking to exact reparation or “level the score” (Furlong, Sharma,
& Rhee, 2000, p. 83; Lockwood, 1997). Evidence also supports the claim that forms of violent victimization
such as bullying and exclusion can eventually produce an inner sense of hopelessness and vulnerability that
can lead to rampage shooting (Newman et al., 2004). However, not all rampage shooters were bullied; some
may have suffered psychological trauma, and others have been influenced by witnessing violent trauma to
their friends and in their neighborhoods. Henry (2009) urges,
Consider the range of physical, psychological, and symbolic violence as cumulatively reciprocal
contributing causal elements that can build over time to produce instances of extreme violence.
From this perspective, rampage school violence is not a different crime but an extreme level of the
culmination of its constitutive forms of subviolence. (p. 1252)
Henry (2000, 2009) further argues that incidents of violence in school are not only cumulative between victim
and offender, but operate across multiple levels. As such, micro-level interpersonal violence can combine
with symbolic images of media violence and with institutional acts of coercive power and government acts
of force and violence. The expression of force through agencies of the state, whether the military or the
justice system, legitimates the use of violence to deal with problems and cannot be left out of any equation
seeking a comprehensive explanation for specific acts of violence, however remote may seem the direct
interrelationships between these different levels. The challenge is to develop ways to assess the nature and
strengths of these interrelationships over time.
Finally, using a more expansive definition of school violence, including institutional and mass mediated forms
of symbolic violence, Henry (2009) identifies and locates these examples of school violence at different levels
and represents them in a typological matrix, showing that instances of school violence at one level can
themselves serve as causes of school violence at another level. Moreover, the effects of one form of school
violence operative at one level can be both the outcome of a subset of causative processes and a contributing
cause to subsequent violent outcomes, in an ongoing chain of violence. He concludes:
It is not enough to limit the analysis of school violence to incidents of particular types of student
violence. Rather, it is important to identify a range of levels of violence within the school and a wide
range of violence at different levels of society that impact the school, to identify and to see how these
are each reciprocally interrelated in the school setting as a cumulative process over time. In this way,
we will be able to comprehend how violent acts, including extreme expressions such as rampage
school shootings, are outcomes of multiple subviolent, violent, and symbolically violent processes….
Any adequate analysis of school violence, therefore, has to locate the micro-interactive, institutional
practices and sociocultural productions in the wider political economy of the society in which these
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occur. Ignoring the structural inequalities of power in the wider system reduces the cause of school
violence to local and situational inequalities of power, suggesting that policies can be addressed to
intervene locally, such as at the level of peer subculture or school organization. While these levels
of intervention are important, they alone are insufficient. (Henry, 2009, p. 1262)
Thus, in order to develop adequate policies concerning school violence, we need to identify the multiple
causes of school violence, noting that some of the causes are, indeed, themselves forms of violence. We also
need to locate these causes at their level of operation in a nested hierarchy of cumulative interaction, examine
the linkages between the different levels of cause (micro, meso, macro), and determine the strengths of these
inter-level linkages. Indeed, although the CDC (2008) sees school violence as facilitated by different level
strategies, for example, individual level, relationship level, community level, and societal level strategies, it
fails to recognize that systemic, inter-level linkages exist between levels that require strategies that address
these linkages. Thus, the CDC argues that at the community level, in addition to local and school-based
strategies that involve class management and curriculum techniques and practices, changes to “the social
environment of the school … can reduce crime and fear” (p. 4). Further, “Schools are embedded within
a larger community environment by which they are influenced. As a result, broader efforts to change the
physical and social environments of communities can also benefit schools” (p. 4). Unfortunately, this policy
analysis implies dealing with each level separately, which ignores the interrelationships between the levels
that is fundamental to the Barak (2003) and Henry (2009) analysis discussed earlier. Although it may seem
that policies that deal with each level separately would negate the need for considering the interrelationships
between levels, this presumes that we can know what the relevant levels are without an analysis of these
interrelationships. So part of the reason for examining this interrelationship across levels is to establish which
causal factors at which levels are in need of policy intervention.
Conclusion
Our purpose in this chapter was not to arrive at a comprehensive policy for school violence, but to
demonstrate the advantages of approaching a complex social problem with the tools of the integrative
research process. We examined how the complex problem of violence/school violence would be analyzed
from such a perspective rather than from the conventional disciplinary or multidisciplinary perspectives. We
explored how integrative criminologists have struggled with the issues of which elements of the variety
of disciplinary theories to include in their analysis, how they integrate concepts through redefinition, the
different ways they integrate disciplinary-based theoretical propositions, and their incorporation of different
kinds of causality. We also demonstrated the importance not only of recognizing different levels of analysis
but of developing a holistic understanding of the strengths of interaction between these different levels as
they vary over time. We determined that the most promising explanation of violence/school violence is the
cumulative reciprocal theory that sees causes of violent events at different levels and also sees these very
events as contributing causes of subsequent violent acts. Finally, we argued that the most promising policies
for combating school violence are those that incorporate an appreciation of multiple causality operative at
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different levels and identify the strengths or nature of the interrelationships of the processes operative at the
different levels.
Any policy based on an integrative theory must address this challenge if we are to transcend our current state
of knowledge and develop the ability to address such complex social problems. One promising way forward
is The Columbine Effect (Muschert & Peguero, 2010; Muschert, Henry, Bracy, & Peguero, in press), which
examines school antiviolence policy in the context of the totality of the complexity of the problem, seeking
to relate specific policies to different levels and dimensions of the problem. Rather than taking policies in
isolation or as alternatives, the authors argue that effective prevention policy requires the multiple, cumulative
causes of school violence to be simultaneously addressed through a comprehensive web of policies.
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- Integrative Theory in Criminology Applied to the Complex Social Problem of School Violence
- In: Case Studies in Interdisciplinary Research
