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      Adolescents’ expectations for types of victim retaliation following direct bullying

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      Author(s)
      Marlow, C.
      Gönültaş, Seçil
      Mulvey, K. L.
      Date
      2022-11-23
      Source Title
      Journal of Youth and Adolescence
      Print ISSN
      0047-2891
      Publisher
      Springer
      Volume
      52
      Issue
      3
      Pages
      533 - 546
      Language
      English
      Type
      Article
      Item Usage Stats
      10
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      34
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      Abstract
      Little is known about adolescents’ expectations around how victims of bullying might retaliate following victimization. These expectations are important as they may inform adolescent’s own behaviors, particularly intervention behaviors, in regard to bullying and potential retaliation. This study investigated adolescents’ retaliation expectations and expected bystander reactions to retaliation following physical and social bullying. Participants included 6th grade (N = 450, Mage = 11.73 years, SD = 0.84) and 9th grade (N = 446, Mage = 14.82 years) adolescents (50.2% female, 63.3% European American, 22.9% African American, 3.9% Latino/a, 7% Multiracial, 2.9% Other) from middle-to-low-income U.S. public schools. Participants responded to open-ended prompts about victim responses to bullying, rating retaliation acceptability, and likelihood of engaging in bystander behaviors. ANOVAs were conducted to examine differences in retaliation expectation by type of aggression. Further, linear regressions were used to explore what factors were related to participants’ expectations regarding bystander intervention. Participants expected victims to retaliate by causing harm and expected the type of retaliation to match the type of bullying. Younger participants were more specific and males were more likely to expect physical harm than females. Finally, acceptability of retaliation predicted bystander interventions. Adolescents expect aggressive retaliation suggesting that intervention might focus on teaching them ways to respond when they are bullied or observe bullying.
      Keywords
      Adolescence
      Bullying
      Bystander intervention
      Moral judgments
      Retaliation
      Permalink
      http://hdl.handle.net/11693/111584
      Published Version (Please cite this version)
      https://doi.org/10.1007/s10964-022-01710-5
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