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Annotation Cyberbullying has emerged as a major issue across societies and for schools, parents, children, and national governments (see Smith and Steffgen, 2013). Despite some similarities with traditional, or face-to-face (f2f) bullying (Mc Guckin, Cummins and Lewis, 2010), there is sufficient difference to warrant this contemporary and detailed examination of the issues related to cyberbullying--from a perspective that draws upon the most pertinent research and informed opinion from key researchers and thinkers from across the globe. The initial and pioneering knowledge about cyberbullying has now moved to a newer, more mature position that has been able to delineate the nuances associated with the issue, and importantly, yield robust insights for those involved in, or tasked to deal with, cyberbullying. This Special Issue brings together a collection of papers that represents the most up-to-date perspectives and evidence from across the globe. Collectively, these papers demonstrate how scholars and policy makers, from disparate disciplinary or stakeholder starting points, are progressing in their understanding of each other's language and requirements--thus facilitating the important move towards a more coherent and understandable agenda that seeks to minimize the potential risks to children and young people, understand the relationships between involvement in cyberbullying and associated biopsychosocial factors, in order to implement integrated and evidence-informed intervention and prevention programmes.
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This eBook is a collection of articles from a Frontiers Research Topic. Frontiers Research Topics are very popular trademarks of the Frontiers Journals Series: they are collections of at least ten articles, all centered on a particular subject. With their unique mix of varied contributions from Original Research to Review Articles, Frontiers Research Topics unify the most influential researchers, the latest key findings and historical advances in a hot research area! Find out more on how to host your own Frontiers Research Topic or contribute to one as an author by contacting the Frontiers Editorial Office: frontiersin.org/about/contact
bullying --- cyberbullying --- risk and protective factors --- psychosocial --- context variables
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Das vorliegende Open-Access-Buch befasst sich mit den Fragen, welche Rollen Klassenmitglieder bei Bullying einnehmen und durch welche sozial-kognitiven und affektiven Reaktionen sie sich auszeichnen. Bei Bullying handelt es sich um aggressives Verhalten, das sich über einen längeren Zeitraum hinweg systematisch gegen schwächere Mitglieder einer Gruppe richtet. Bullying ist dementsprechend als Gruppenphänomen zu verstehen, das unter anderem häufig in Schulklassen auftritt. Die vorliegende empirische Arbeit berücksichtigt sowohl Bullying im schulischen Kontext als auch Bullying mittels digitaler Medien – also Cyberbullying. Grundannahme ist, dass sich Bullying im Klassenverband heutzutage auch in den Cyberspace erstreckt. Neben Täter- und Opfer-Rolle wird zwischen drei Bystander-Rollen differenziert: Verstärker, Verteidiger und Außenstehende. Der Vergleich zwischen diesen Rollen zeigt, dass sich unter Kontrolle von Geschlecht und Klassenstufe insbesondere Verteidiger- und Täter-Rolle in Hinblick auf Empathie, Moral Disengagement, Verantwortungsgefühl und Selbstwirksamkeitserwartungen unterscheiden, es jedoch wider Erwarten keine Unterschiede zwischen den Bystander-Rollen bezüglich Befürchtungen gibt.
The self, ego, identity, personality --- Psychology --- Cyberbullying/ Cybermobbing --- Verantwortung --- Bullying/ Mobbing --- Moral Disengagement --- Selbstwirksamkeitserwartungen --- Empathie
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Warum sind unsere Daten und das Private schützenswert? Diese Frage stellt sich insbesondere in Zeiten der vierten Industriellen Revolution, des Internets der Dinge und des politischen Wandels. Julia Maria Mönig zeigt, dass Hannah Arendts Anliegen, das Private unbedingt zu bewahren, von ihrem Verständnis des antiken Haushalts bis hin zur Verletzung der informationellen Privatheit im Totalitarismus aufschlussreiche Einsichten in aktuelle Debatten - etwa über Cybermobbing - liefert. Das Buch richtet sich an Philosoph_innen ebenso wie an Datenschützer_innen und Privatheitsforscher_innen verschiedener Disziplinen sowie an alle, die sich über die Zukunft und Gegenwart der Demokratie Gedanken machen.
Privatheit; Hannah Arendt; Vierte Industrielle Revolution; Datenschutz; Totalitarismus; Internet; Cybermobbing; Cyberspace; Philosophie; Politik; Medien; Politische Philosophie; Medienphilosophie; Deutsche Philosophiegeschichte; Privacy; Data Protection; Totalitarism; Cyberbullying; Philosophy; Politics; Media; Political Philosophy; Media Philosophy; German History of Philosophy --- Cyberbullying. --- Cyberspace. --- Data Protection. --- German History of Philosophy. --- Hannah Arendt. --- Internet. --- Media Philosophy. --- Media. --- Philosophy. --- Political Philosophy. --- Politics. --- Totalitarism.
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El libro Ciberbullying, salud y afrontamiento en estudiantes. El caso de dos universidades presenta los hallazgos de una investigación desarrollada entre la Universidad Católica Luis Amigó, Centro Regional Bogotá, y la Universidad Miguel de Cervantes, de Santiago de Chile, que pretendió abordar las prácticas de ciberbullying, los estilos de vida saludable y las estrategias de afrontamiento en la población universitaria. Este estudio dio cuenta de que algunos estudiantes habían vivido experiencias de ciberbullying y que presentaban alteraciones en su salud por el estrés entre el desarrollo de la jornada laboral y académica, para lo cual implementaban estrategias de afrontamiento basadas en la solución de problemas, el apoyo psicológico, la estructuración cognitiva y el apoyo espiritual.
Ciberacoso --- Cyberbullying --- College students --- Estudiantes universitarios --- Estrategias de afrontamiento ante el ciberacoso --- Ciberbullying --- Universidades --- Investigaciones. --- Research. --- Psychology. --- Aspectos psicológicos. --- Cyber bullying --- Online bullying --- Virtual bullying --- Bullying --- Personality --- Psychology --- Mental health
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This book, a Special Issue of the International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, has been curated by three leading international experts on the topic. Following their editorial, there are 14 contributions on the topic of interventions against bullying, including cyberbullying, and similar abusive behaviors such as dating violence. Some contributions also assess positive or protective factors such as well-being, self-efficacy, and school climate. Eight of the contributions directly assess the effects of an intervention, with pre/post test designs and experimental and control groups. The other contributions examine a range of relevant topics, such as teacher attitudes and pupils’ confidence in intervening rather than being passive bystanders. Ten countries are represented among the authors. Most of the articles are about secondary schools (pupils, or teachers), but there are also contributions on early childhood, primary school, and university. This book will be of interest and relevance not only to researchers but also to teachers and educational practitioners concerned with pupil safety and well-being in school, and provides practical ways to reduce bullying and its harmful effects.
n/a --- successful educational action --- cyber-victim --- mental health --- South Korea --- Prev@cib --- teacher based-intervention --- school --- bystanders --- wellbeing --- self-efficacy --- subgroup analyses --- young children --- Dat-e Adolescence --- social environment --- prevention --- prevention program --- risk factors --- verbal bullying --- tabby intervention program --- coping strategies --- warmth --- adolescents --- minors --- cyber victimization --- moral disengagement --- dating violence --- cyberbullying --- cyberbullying interventions --- school climate --- intervention --- bullying --- Bullying --- hakkyo-pokryuk --- anti-bullying --- cyberbullying and the law --- classroom cohesion --- martial arts --- classroom climate --- willingness to intervene --- relational bullying --- teacher styles --- authoritative leadership --- cybervictimization --- teachers --- traditional victimization --- ecological system theory --- resilience --- moderators --- effectiveness --- intervention program --- Asegúrate program --- class teacher --- special education needs students --- cyber-aggressor --- control --- aggression --- families --- peer support --- pre-service teachers --- threat assessment --- temperament --- educational lifespan --- Asegúrate program
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eGirls, eCitizens is a landmark work that explores the many forces that shape girls’ and young women’s experiences of privacy, identity, and equality in our digitally networked society. Drawing on the multi-disciplinary expertise of a remarkable team of leading Canadian and international scholars, as well as Canada’s foremost digital literacy organization, MediaSmarts, this collection presents the complex realities of digitized communications for girls and young women as revealed through the findings of The eGirls Project (www.egirlsproject.ca) and other important research initiatives. Aimed at moving dialogues on scholarship and policy around girls and technology away from established binaries of good vs bad, or risk vs opportunity, these seminal contributions explore the interplay of factors that shape online environments characterized by a gendered gaze and too often punctuated by sexualized violence. Perhaps most importantly, this collection offers first-hand perspectives collected from girls and young women themselves, providing a unique window on what it is to be a girl in today’s digitized society.
Internet --- Social media. --- Young women. --- Teenage girls. --- Cyberfeminism. --- Social aspects. --- Feminist theory --- User-generated media --- Communication --- User-generated content --- Women --- Young adults --- Girls --- Adolescent girls --- Female adolescents --- Teenagers --- the egirls project --- privacy --- technology --- digitally networked society --- equality --- gendered gaze --- young women --- girls --- digitized communications --- identity --- Cyberbullying --- Facebook --- Social media --- Social networking service --- Surveillance
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Despite the significant decrease in bullying that has been reported in many countries during the last two decades, bullying continues to be a significant problem among young people. Given the increase of internet use among youth, researchers have started to pay attention to cyberspace, understanding that it may be a fertile ground for bullying behaviors, specifically, what is known as cyberbullying. “Family, Bullying and Cyberbullying” examines the association of several family variables with bullying in offline and online environments during childhood and adolescence. Contributors from the Americas, Canada, Asia, and Europe offer cutting-edge research on family dynamics, bystander behaviors, parents’ and educators’ perceptions, and bullying and cyberbullying prevention and intervention strategies of bullying for school and home. This book also provides an analysis of the current research on the influence of family in the electronic bullying. Research topics included in the book: 1) Parental education and bullying and cyberbullying; 2) Parental monitoring and cyberbullying; 3) Parental communication and feelings of affiliation; 4) Student and educator perspective on cyberbullying; 5) Parents’ responses to bullying; 6) Parental mediation and bystander behaviors; 7) Development of scales to measure cyberbullying and high internet risks. “Family, Bullying and Cyberbullying” is an essential resource for researchers, graduate students, families, and practitioners in social education, social work, teacher education, and psychology.
parent --- education --- teacher education --- peers --- family functioning --- parental communication --- psychometric properties --- teenagers --- scale development --- bystanding --- parental mediation --- mothers --- boarding students --- information and communication technology --- affiliation --- high-risk behaviours --- young children --- prevention --- parenting --- victims --- bullying awareness --- coping strategies --- parental monitoring --- cyberbullying --- restriction --- adolescence --- internet --- bullying --- wang-ta --- parents --- K-12 --- bystander --- victimization --- training --- private school --- cybervictimization --- supervision --- cyber-victimization --- bully --- socialization --- violence --- aggression --- self-concept --- systematic review --- perpetration --- school coexistence --- perceptions --- pre-service teachers --- management --- family --- parental control --- cyber-kindness
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This book investigates regulatory and social pressures that social media companies face in the aftermath of high profile cyberbullying incidents. The author's research evaluates the policies companies develop to protect themselves and users. This includes interviews with NGO and social media company reps in the US and the EU. She triangulates these findings against news, policy reports, evaluations and interviews with e-safety experts. This book raises questions about the legitimacy of expecting companies to balance the tension between free speech and child protection without publicly revealing their decision-making processes. In an environment where e-safety is part of the corporate business model, this book unveils the process through which established social media companies receive less government scrutiny than start-ups. The importance of this research for law and policy argues for an OA edition to ensure the work is widely and globally accessible to scholars and decision makers.
Online social networks --- Internet industry --- Cyberbullying --- Moral and ethical aspects. --- Prevention. --- Cyber bullying --- Online bullying --- Virtual bullying --- Electronic social networks --- Social networking Web sites --- Bullying --- Computer industry --- Social media --- Social networks --- Sociotechnical systems --- Web sites --- Virtual communities --- Internet and children --- Safety measures. --- Safety regulations. --- Children and the Internet --- Internet (Computer network) and children --- Children --- INFORMATION SCIENCE/Technology & Policy --- INFORMATION SCIENCE/Internet Studies --- Media studies --- Social psychology --- Social problems --- Age group sociology --- Mass communications --- Communities, Online (Online social networks) --- Communities, Virtual (Online social networks) --- Online communities (Online social networks) --- online harassment --- online platforms --- youth --- non-governmental organizations --- e-safety --- self-regulation --- children's rights --- Facebook --- Twitter --- Instagram --- Snapchat --- suicide --- child --- kids --- regulate --- law --- Internet --- bullying --- policymaking --- free speech --- corporate --- corporations --- bullies --- technology
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Disruptive behavior disorders (DBD) refer to a group of conditions that typically share difficulties in modulating aggressive conducts, self-control, and impulses, with resulting behaviors that constitute a threat to others’ safety and to social norms. Problematic issues with self-control associated with these disorders are commonly first observed in childhood, but may often persist into adolescence and adulthood, or pose a developmental risk for subsequent negative outcomes. The clinical management of DBD in childhood and adolescence has seen great advances in recent years, and research has also focused on identifying early signs, predictors, and risk factors, which may help clinicians to disentangle and subtype the heterogeneous manifestations of BDB. This has allowed significant progress to be made in defining specific developmental trajectories, targeted prevention programs, and timely treatment strategies. The principal aims of this Special Issue were thus to address three core features of DBD clinical management, the multidimensional assessment of callous–unemotional traits, empathic faults and emotional dysregulation, and the available treatment options. In this Special Issue, twelve relevant contributions, including ten original articles, one systematic review, and one study protocol, which provide novel insights for the assessment and treatment of DBD in clinical practice, have been collected by the editors.
bullying --- moral disengagement --- violence --- disruptive behavior --- peer aggression --- social rules --- socialization --- externalizing symptoms --- antisocial personality problems --- emerging adulthood --- family functioning --- impulsivity --- empathy --- suicidality --- non-suicidal self-injuries --- bipolar disorder --- psychopathic traits --- childhood --- fearlessness --- parental warmth --- conscience development --- big five personality traits model --- childrearing --- mother rejection --- structural equation modeling --- values --- substance use --- aggression --- cognitive-behavioral --- group intervention --- callous–unemotional traits --- conduct problems --- cyberbullying --- gender --- mindfulness --- reactive aggression --- Coping Power --- self-regulation --- prevention --- Mindful Coping Power --- disruptive behavior disorders --- parenting style --- sibling relationship --- emotional and behavioral problems --- forgiveness --- responsibility --- guilt --- obsessive-compulsive problems --- adolescence --- theory of mind --- emotion recognition --- ADHD --- conduct disorder --- oppositional defiant disorder --- medications for aggression --- callous-unemotional traits --- D2 receptor modulators --- ADHD medications --- neuropsychological functioning --- autonomic functioning --- control design --- acute placebo-controlled single-blind challenge clinical trial --- n/a
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