Affirmed by published opinion. Judge WILKINSON wrote the opinion, in which Judge NIEMEYER and Judge SHEDD joined.
OPINION
This case presents the question of whether escape qualifies as a “violent felony” under the Armed Career Criminal Act (“ACCA”) when the escape did not involve force or violence. In connection with the armed robbery of National Cash Advance, a payday lending service, Linwood Mathias was indicted as a felon in possession of firearms in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 922(g)(1) and 924(e) (2000 & Supp. 2004). He pled guilty. During sentencing, the district court held that Mathias’ three prior convictions — two for burglary and one for felony escape — were “violent felon[ies]” under the ACCA. The court thus designated Mathias an armed career criminal and sentenced him to the statutory minimum: fifteen years imprisonment.
Mathias appeals this sentence. He contends that he should not have been classified as an armed career criminal because the circumstances of his case involved nothing more than a walkaway from a work release program and because his escape conviction was under a Virginia law titled “Escape without force or violence.” We disagree. Because every escape “involves conduct that presents a serious potential risk of physical injury to another,” see 18 U.S.C. § 924(e)(l)(B)(ii) (2000), Mathias’ escape conviction is a “violent felony” *745 under the ACCA. We therefore affirm Mathias’ sentence.
I.
Linwood Mathias and codefendants Antonio Cooper and Terry Deberry executed an armed robbery of National Cash Advance, a payday lender in Elizabeth City, North Carolina. 1 On August 23, 2004, defendants met at Cooper’s residence. De-berry then drove Mathias and Cooper to National Cash Advance in the 1994 Ford Explorer he had stolen for the occasion.
Mathias and Cooper, both armed, entered the lending business. National Cash Advance manager Joann Godfrey was in the store along with her eighteen-year-old daughter and three-year-old son. Cooper demanded money and Mathias and Cooper brandished loaded firearms — Mathias a Glock 9 millimeter semi-automatic pistol and Cooper a Colt Cobra .38 Special caliber revolver. Cooper took $300 from the money drawer and Mathias escorted God-frey and her children to a back room. Godfrey was told to remain in the back room for at least fifteen minutes and Mathias and Cooper joined Deberry in the getaway vehicle.
Law enforcement officers, having been alerted by a National Cash Advance customer, attempted to stop the Ford Explorer minutes after it left the lender’s parking lot. Deberry refused to pull over. He instead exited the still-moving vehicle and fled on foot. Cooper began driving with Mathias in the vehicle. He led the officers on an eleven mile high-speed chase that ended when Cooper crashed the Ford Explorer into the back of a police car. The Glock 9 millimeter semi-automatic pistol and Colt Cobra .38 Special caliber revolver were found near the passenger seat of the stolen Explorer.
At the time of the armed robbery, Mathias was a convicted felon. On November 10, 2004, he was indicted as a felon-in-possession and of aiding and abetting the same conduct in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 922(g)(1), 924, and 2. Mathias pled guilty to the felon-in-possession and aiding and abetting charges on July 12, 2005.
The Presentence Investigation Report catalogued Mathias’ extensive criminal history. Most pertinently, the PSR identified three prior “violent felony” convictions: two for burglary and one for felony escape. With respect to the felony escape conviction, the PSR noted that Defendant Mathias had walked away from a work release program in violation of Virginia Code § 18.2-479(B). Mathias objected to the violent felony classification of his prior Virginia escape conviction and argued that the conviction was a nonviolent one under Virginia law. The district court disagreed. The court held that Mathias’ escape conviction was a violent felony for purposes of the ACCA regardless of its classification under state law. The court then adopted without modification the PSR, designated Mathias an armed career criminal, and imposed the mandatory minimum sentence of fifteen years imprisonment required by the ACCA.
Mathias now appeals.
II.
The Armed Career Criminal Act imposes heightened sentences on individuals who *746 by repeated conduct have demonstrated an unwillingness to abide by basic social norms as expressed in state and federal criminal codes. Under the statute, any person who violates the felon-in-possession statute, 18 U.S.C. § 922(g), and has three previous “violent felony” convictions must be designated an armed career criminal. 18 U.S.C. § 924(e)(1). This designation carries a mandatory sentence of not less than fifteen years. Id. The ACCA, 18 U.S.C. § 924(e)(2)(B), defines the term “violent felony” as any crime punishable by imprisonment for more than one year that (1) “has as an element the use, attempted use, or threatened use of physical force against the person of another,” or (2) “is burglary, arson, or extortion, involves use of explosives, or otherwise involves conduct that presents a serious potential risk of physical injury to another.”
Mathias concedes that his two prior burglary convictions are “violent felon[ies]” under the Armed Career Criminal Act and qualifying predicate offenses for an armed career criminal designation. He contends, however, that his felony escape conviction does not constitute a “violent felony,” and that the district court’s imposition of the ACCA’s statutory minimum fifteen-year sentence was unlawful. We review
de novo
the district court’s conclusion that Mathias’ escape conviction qualifies as a “violent felony.”
United States v. Green,
A.
Mathias first argues that his escape conviction does not constitute a “violent felony” under the ACCA because the particular circumstances of his escape—he walked away from a work release program—presented no risk of serious injury. He urges us to “loo[k] beyond the definition of the charging document and statute” and parse the underlying factual basis of his conviction.
This argument ignores settled law: in this circuit, as in others, the question of whether an escape is a “violent felony” is a categorical one. See,
e.g., United States v. Wardrick,
The question, therefore, is whether escape as codified in Virginia Code § 18.2-479(B) is a “violent felony.”
See United States v. Kirksey,
Any person, lawfully confined in jail or lawfully in the custody of any court, officer of the court, or of any law-enforcement officer on a charge or conviction of a felony, who escapes, other than by force or violence or by setting fire to the jail, is guilty of a Class 6 felony.
The plain text of the Virginia statute punishes those who unlawfully and felo-niously escape from confinement. We are, therefore, hard pressed to find that such an escape does not “involv[e] conduct that presents a serious potential risk of physi *747 cal injury to another.” See 18 U.S.C. § 924(e)(l)(B)(ii).
This court decided as much in
United States v. Hairston,
The same result obtains here. Defendant Mathias unlawfully and feloniously broke the bonds of custody when he walked away from the work, release program. In this, he violated Virginia Code § 18.2-479(B), and committed a “violent felony” under the categorical approach, this court’s decision in Hairston, and the second prong of 18 U.S.C. § 924(e)(1)(B).
Our conclusion finds support in the decisions of our sister circuits. Every court of appeals to consider the question has concluded that felony escape convictions categorically constitute violent felonies within the ambit of § 924(e).
See, e.g., United States v. Jackson,
B.
Mathias nonetheless contends that Hair-ston does not apply to this case and that his escape conviction cannot be a “violent felony” because Virginia Code § 18.2-479(B) defines escape as a “nonviolent” offense. He directs us to the Virginia statute’s title, “Escape without force or violence or setting fire to jail,” and argues that, unlike the North Carolina statute at issue in Hairston, Virginia Code § 18.2-479(B) “applies only to those who escape *748 ‘other than by force or violence.’ ” There are two problems with this approach.
First, the fact that Mathias’ conviction is labeled “nonviolent” by state law is beside the point. The point is simply that Congress, in enacting the ACCA, spoke in terms of risk, not result. Under the Armed Career Criminal Act, “it is not necessary that the defendant’s specific conduct actually resulted in physical injury to another.”
United States v. Moudy,
There can be no doubt that a serious potential risk of physical injury is part and parcel of Mathias’ escape conviction.
See
18 U.S.C. § 924(e)(1)(B)(ii). For escape is a volatile enterprise. At the outset, there is always a chance that an escape attempt will be interrupted — by a prison guard, work supervisor, or citizen bystander.
Hairston,
Even if the escape itself could somehow sidestep any potential risk of injury, the circumstances of recapture necessarily encompass just such a risk. Individuals who find custody intolerable to the point of escape are unlikely to calmly succumb to recapture efforts. Indeed, the very fact of “escape invites pursuit; and the pursuit, confrontation.”
Jackson,
Here, the Virginia Code defines a § 18.2-479(B) violation as escape “other than by force or violence.... ” Even putting aside the fact that a risk of physical harm exists with every escape, the Virginia provision speaks only to what occurred at the time of flight — not to the additional risk presented at the time of recapture. Upon escape, a prisoner becomes a fugitive from justice and the risk of physical injury continues so long as the escapee remains at large. In sum, “[e]ven the most peaceful escape cannot eliminate the potential for violent conflict when the authorities attempt to recapture the escapee.”
United States v. Nation,
Second, the fact that “violence” is not an element of Virginia Code § 18.2-479(B) is hardly dispositive. A statute need not *749 proscribe “force” or “violence” in so many words for a conviction under its provisions to be deemed a violent one. And while Mathias is correct that the first clause of § 924(e)(2)(B) defines as violent felonies those which have “as an element the use, attempted use, or threatened use of physical force against the person of another,” he altogether ignores the second clause of § 924(e)(2)(B). That provision makes no mention of “force” or “violence” — much less suggest that “force” or “violence” is a required element. Rather, as we have noted above, the appropriate inquiry is risk: under § 924(e)(2)(B)(ii), violent felonies include those which “otherwise in-volv[e] conduct that presents a serious potential risk of physical injury to another.”
To adopt Mathias’ approach and conclude that the second clause of § 924(e) only reaches conduct that is itself violent (and thus covered by the first clause of § 924(e)), would render the “otherwise” clause of § 924(e) superfluous. But it is “a classic canon of statutory construction that courts must ‘give effect to every provision and word in a statute and avoid any interpretation that may render statutory terms meaningless or superfluous.’ ”
Discover Bank v. Vaden,
III.
For the foregoing reasons, we conclude that Mathias’ felony escape conviction under Virginia Code § 18.2-479(B) is a “violent felony” as defined by the ACCA. Mathias’ sentence is affirmed.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Codefendant Cooper pled guilty to possession of a firearm by a convicted felon and aiding and abetting the same conduct. He was sentenced to 120 months’ imprisonment. Cooper appealed. This court affirmed, finding Cooper’s sentence to be reasonable.
United States v. Cooper,
. In addition, the vast majority of our sister circuits (and this court) have concluded that, because escape “involves conduct that presents a serious potential risk of physical injury to another,” it is a "crime of violence” as defined by the career offender sentencing guideline, USSG § 4B1.2(a).
Compare
USSG § 4B 1.2(a)
to
18 U.S.C. § 924(e)(2)(B)(ii).
See United States v. Winn,
