Bullying Victimization within Friendships: An Individual and Context Sensitive Analysis

Bullying victimization within the context of friendships is a complex phenomenon that is commonly experienced among youth, yet is insufficiently understood. Current psychosocial research examining bullying is often devoid of descriptions of the relationship that exists between those who bullied or a...

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Main Author: Bouchard, Karen
Other Authors: Smith, David
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10393/38808
http://dx.doi.org/10.20381/ruor-23060
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spelling ndltd-uottawa.ca-oai-ruor.uottawa.ca-10393-388082019-02-10T05:37:14Z Bullying Victimization within Friendships: An Individual and Context Sensitive Analysis Bouchard, Karen Smith, David Bullying Victimization Friendship Qualitative Teacher-Student Relationships Youth Bullying victimization within the context of friendships is a complex phenomenon that is commonly experienced among youth, yet is insufficiently understood. Current psychosocial research examining bullying is often devoid of descriptions of the relationship that exists between those who bullied or are bullied (i.e., are they friends, enemies, former friends?), and there continues to be limited consideration of the underlying social dynamics and negotiations that occur within friendships containing bullying. Furthermore, there is a clear need for bullying research to consider how wider macro-level forces (e.g., social processes, power relations, and cultural discourses) can influence the bullying within friendship experience. Guided by a social-ecological framework, this dissertation reports on the findings from two empirical studies that investigated adolescents' experiences of bullying victimization within friendship. These studies involved interviewing previously victimized adolescents and young women; the analytical approaches were guided by thematic analysis and constructivist grounded theory. The results indicate that friendship victimization is a hurtful relational experience that involves painful emotions and carries significant interpersonal risks for adolescents. Furthermore, participants’ responses to their friend’s bullying behaviours were constrained by a number of barriers, such as depictions of bullying that individualize the problem, discourses of resistance that privilege overt responses, and gender expectations. Finally, the dissertation considers how teacher-student relationships influence peer bullying experiences and reemphasizes how teachers can be influential allies for bullying prevention and intervention. 2019-02-08T21:14:56Z 2019-02-08T21:14:56Z 2019-02-08 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10393/38808 http://dx.doi.org/10.20381/ruor-23060 en application/pdf Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Bullying
Victimization
Friendship
Qualitative
Teacher-Student Relationships
Youth
spellingShingle Bullying
Victimization
Friendship
Qualitative
Teacher-Student Relationships
Youth
Bouchard, Karen
Bullying Victimization within Friendships: An Individual and Context Sensitive Analysis
description Bullying victimization within the context of friendships is a complex phenomenon that is commonly experienced among youth, yet is insufficiently understood. Current psychosocial research examining bullying is often devoid of descriptions of the relationship that exists between those who bullied or are bullied (i.e., are they friends, enemies, former friends?), and there continues to be limited consideration of the underlying social dynamics and negotiations that occur within friendships containing bullying. Furthermore, there is a clear need for bullying research to consider how wider macro-level forces (e.g., social processes, power relations, and cultural discourses) can influence the bullying within friendship experience. Guided by a social-ecological framework, this dissertation reports on the findings from two empirical studies that investigated adolescents' experiences of bullying victimization within friendship. These studies involved interviewing previously victimized adolescents and young women; the analytical approaches were guided by thematic analysis and constructivist grounded theory. The results indicate that friendship victimization is a hurtful relational experience that involves painful emotions and carries significant interpersonal risks for adolescents. Furthermore, participants’ responses to their friend’s bullying behaviours were constrained by a number of barriers, such as depictions of bullying that individualize the problem, discourses of resistance that privilege overt responses, and gender expectations. Finally, the dissertation considers how teacher-student relationships influence peer bullying experiences and reemphasizes how teachers can be influential allies for bullying prevention and intervention.
author2 Smith, David
author_facet Smith, David
Bouchard, Karen
author Bouchard, Karen
author_sort Bouchard, Karen
title Bullying Victimization within Friendships: An Individual and Context Sensitive Analysis
title_short Bullying Victimization within Friendships: An Individual and Context Sensitive Analysis
title_full Bullying Victimization within Friendships: An Individual and Context Sensitive Analysis
title_fullStr Bullying Victimization within Friendships: An Individual and Context Sensitive Analysis
title_full_unstemmed Bullying Victimization within Friendships: An Individual and Context Sensitive Analysis
title_sort bullying victimization within friendships: an individual and context sensitive analysis
publisher Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa
publishDate 2019
url http://hdl.handle.net/10393/38808
http://dx.doi.org/10.20381/ruor-23060
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