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Susett Naranjo-Pou; Izabela Zych – Journal of Adolescence, 2025
Introduction: Expressions of cyberhate motivated by characteristics such as gender, ethnicity, and religious beliefs are now present and prevalent on social networks. Past research, both in online and offline contexts, has identified that, although there may be an overlap between victims and perpetrators of violence; this is not always the case.…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Victims, Bullying, Computer Mediated Communication
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David C. R. Kerr; Maadhanki R. Kasimanickam; Daniel E. Bradford; Harold Bae; Kathleen A. Parks – Journal of American College Health, 2025
Objective: National College Health Assessment (NCHA) and Campus Safety and Security (CSS) data on sexual assault and alcohol misuse are potentially informative, but evidence of convergence is needed. Method: NCHA prevalence data from 73 four-year colleges on female students' sexual assault experiences and students' binge drinking were matched with…
Descriptors: Alcohol Abuse, Sexual Abuse, College Students, Females
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Misun Yi – Journal of Applied Research in Intellectual Disabilities, 2025
Background: Individuals with intellectual disabilities are amongst the groups most vulnerable to sexual crimes. However, their limited cognitive abilities can make it challenging to obtain detailed statements from victims during investigative interviews. This study examined whether practising answering open-ended questions early in the interview…
Descriptors: Adults, Intellectual Disability, Children, Sexual Abuse
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Sheila Simons – Child Care in Practice, 2024
Domestic abuse continues to be a growing concern across the globe where the overwhelming majority of victims are women. Women also tend to experience more severe forms of violence, which includes murder. There is growing recognition that children who live in households where domestic abuse exists are directly harmed and often show psychological…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Family Violence, Child Abuse, Crime
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Matthew Baker; Kaitlin M. H. Winks; Corey J. Rood; Jodi A. Quas; Shanna Williams – Psychology in the Schools, 2024
Sex trafficking of minors is a significant problem across North America, with sizeable numbers of youth being directly or indirectly manipulated into being exploited or trafficked. Identification of these youth remains difficult, in part because of a lack of knowledge about common characteristics and in part because of victims' reluctance engaging…
Descriptors: Prevention, Sexual Abuse, Crime, Victims of Crime
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Golnaz Ghaderi; Virginie Cobigo – Journal of Applied Research in Intellectual Disabilities, 2024
Background: Understanding the cognitive processes of individuals with intellectual disabilities in financially abusive situations is critical to develop effective prevention strategies. Aims: This study investigated how persons with intellectual disabilities define and analyse financially abusive situations, and how they would feel and act in…
Descriptors: Intellectual Disability, Cognitive Processes, Prevention, Money Management
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Claudia G. Interiano-Shiverdecker; Devon E. Romero; Katherine E. McVay; Emily Satel; Kendra Smith – Professional Counselor, 2024
In this transcendental phenomenological study, we interviewed 10 counselors who have clinical experience working with sex trafficking survivors. Through in-depth individual interviews, participants discussed their lived experiences providing counseling to this population. Our analysis revealed four primary themes: (a) counselor knowledge:…
Descriptors: Counselor Qualifications, Sexual Abuse, Crime, Knowledge Level
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John McCluskey; Byongook Moon; Guan Saw – Journal of School Violence, 2024
Victimization of teachers is an area of growing concern for administrators and policymakers. Recent research has increased the understanding of the prevalence and negative consequences of teacher victimization; however, one gap in the literature involves understanding the quality of treatment when victimizations are reported to school…
Descriptors: Victims, Teacher Attitudes, School Violence, Incidence
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Hunter M. Boehme; John D. Burrow; Sohee Jung – Journal of School Violence, 2024
Over the years, scholars have argued that there are similarities and differences between bullying and hate crimes within Americas' schools. However, no known study has tested the claims that bullying and hate-related victimization are more similar (or different) and whether they share similar protective and/or risk factors. Utilizing the 2019 NCVS…
Descriptors: Risk, Bullying, Crime, Social Bias
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Leticia López-Castro; Mónica López-Ratón; Carolina Rodríguez-Llorente – Elementary School Journal, 2025
The link between technology use and cybervictimization in elementary education is less explored than in secondary education. Increased technology use since COVID-19 and high rates of cybervictimization among elementary students highlight the need to identify early risk factors. This study surveyed 1,169 families of fifth and sixth graders using a…
Descriptors: Crime, Victims, Elementary School Students, COVID-19
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Marija Draganic; Snežana Grbovic; Antoaneta Adžic Zecevic – SAGE Open, 2024
This research has been motivated by a lack of studies related to cyberbullying in Montenegro. The main goal of the research has been to evaluate the incidence of cyberbullying and its most common forms among high school students in Montenegro, as well as whether it is committing and experiencing cyberbullying connected to the self-esteem of high…
Descriptors: Bullying, Computer Mediated Communication, Self Esteem, High School Students
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Helen Cahill; Larissa McLean Davies; Sarah E. Truman; Troy Potter; Michèle Hinton Herrington – Gender and Education, 2025
This article explores whether secondary school English teachers can contribute to consent education in Australia. A scoping study involved reviewing research on consent education, examining both commonly taught and contemporary adolescent literature for themes of sexual consent, and conducting focus groups with English teachers. The textual…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Secondary School Teachers, English Teachers, Consent
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Marjorie Johnstone; Eunjung Lee – Whiteness and Education, 2024
Using a philosophical framework of epistemic injustice and epistemic resistance (Fricker, 2007; Medina, 2013), we examine the recent deaths of nine Indigenous youths in a Northern Ontario city, Thunder Bay. We first document various reports and then we interrogate the impact of this violence on Indigenous communities, considering the egregious…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Indigenous Populations, Death, Colonialism
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Michele Kielty; A. Renee Staton – Journal of Cybersecurity Education, Research and Practice, 2024
Cyber threats have escalated in recent years. Many of these threats have been direct and vicious attacks on K-12 systems. Educators are rarely trained on how to address cyber threats from a systemic and educational perspective when such challenges arise in their school buildings. This article explains the cyber threats that are looming large for…
Descriptors: School Safety, Crime, Information Technology, Kindergarten
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Wing Sze Leung – Journal of College and Character, 2024
The author of this article examines data collected from focus-group discussions about the impact of a social justice education module on human trafficking and low-skilled labor migration in South and Southeast Asia. Employing cognitive developmental theory as an analytical framework, this article shows how the structural complexity of the issue…
Descriptors: Problem Based Learning, Teaching Methods, Values Education, Student Attitudes
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