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2014
DOI: 10.1016/j.soscij.2014.04.004
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Media coverage and issue visibility: State legislative responses to school bullying

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Cited by 14 publications
(22 citation statements)
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“…Many of the consequences of bullying relate to the experience of emotional harm on the individual; depression, anxiety, and suicidal ideation are the most cited emotional consequences of bullying (Bottino, Bottino, Regina, Correia, & Ribeiro, 2015; Moore et al, 2017). Suicidal ideation, suicidal behaviors, and completed suicide attempts related to bullying have been given increased exposure in the media (Winburn, Winburn, & Niemeyer, 2014), and a meta-analysis by Holt et al (2015) found a nearly 3-fold increase in suicidal behavior for victims of bullying. A recent systematic review and meta-analysis by Moore et al (2017) showed evidence for the relationship between bullying (especially bullying victimization) and mental health consequences such as depression, anxiety, and suicidal ideation.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Many of the consequences of bullying relate to the experience of emotional harm on the individual; depression, anxiety, and suicidal ideation are the most cited emotional consequences of bullying (Bottino, Bottino, Regina, Correia, & Ribeiro, 2015; Moore et al, 2017). Suicidal ideation, suicidal behaviors, and completed suicide attempts related to bullying have been given increased exposure in the media (Winburn, Winburn, & Niemeyer, 2014), and a meta-analysis by Holt et al (2015) found a nearly 3-fold increase in suicidal behavior for victims of bullying. A recent systematic review and meta-analysis by Moore et al (2017) showed evidence for the relationship between bullying (especially bullying victimization) and mental health consequences such as depression, anxiety, and suicidal ideation.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As the issue received more media attention during the 2000s, the salience of bullying expanded beyond teachers and school administrators. While primarily still seen as an issue related to schools and school violence, bullying is now being considered more broadly as a public health issue (Puhl, Luedicke, and King 2015), a cyber and social media concern (Sabella, Patchin, and Hinduja 2013; Winburn, Niemeyer, and Reysen 2012), and a public policy problem (see e.g., Winburn, Winburn, and Niemeyer 2014).…”
Section: Background On Bullyingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Contributing to this narrative, the 2002 Safe Schools Initiative report on school shootings found that 71 percent of attackers felt “persecuted, bullied, threatened, attacked or injured by others prior to the incident” (Vossekuil et al 2002). While the release of more information over the next decade discounted the role of bullying at Columbine (Cullen 2009), the topic nonetheless attained national salience (Winburn, Winburn, and Niemeyer 2014). Other smaller-scale school shootings, acts of peer violence, and student suicides kept the issue on the national agenda (Marr and Field 2001).…”
Section: A Brief Background Of Antibullying Policy In the Statesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Other smaller-scale school shootings, acts of peer violence, and student suicides kept the issue on the national agenda (Marr and Field 2001). Columbine may have been a “blurry focusing event” (Birkland and Lawrence 2009), but Georgia’s 1999 antibully statute—whose entry into law preceded Columbine by less than one month—and national media coverage of Columbine, prompted the rapid spread of state policies that either mandated or encouraged school district antibullying efforts (Winburn, Winburn, and Niemeyer 2014). Since 1999, every state, except for Montana, has adopted some statewide antibullying policy.…”
Section: A Brief Background Of Antibullying Policy In the Statesmentioning
confidence: 99%
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