2017
DOI: 10.1016/j.avb.2017.01.004
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Weapon carrying in and out of school among pure bullies, pure victims and bully-victims: A systematic review and meta-analysis of cross-sectional and longitudinal studies

Abstract: Weapon carrying has detrimental effects for perpetrators and victims alike. It is therefore imperative that research efforts are invested into establishing those contextual factors that are associated with this antisocial behavior. This systematic and meta-analytic review investigates the association of weapon carrying with bullying perpetration and victimization inside and outside the school context. Results on pure bullies, pure victims and bully-victims are also presented. Further to extensive searches, acr… Show more

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Cited by 57 publications
(60 citation statements)
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References 71 publications
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“…The reason is that two‐dimensional instruments detect the overlap between victimization and aggression, thereby yielding the new category of Bully‐Victim. This category has been addressed both in traditional bullying (Austin & Joseph, ; Leiner, Dwivedi, Villanos, Singh, Blunk & Peinado, ; Valdebenito, Ttofi, Eisner & Gaffney, ) and in cyberbullying (Buelga, Martínez‐Ferrer & Cava, ; Gámez‐Guadix, Gini & Calvete, ; González‐Cabrera, Calvete, León‐Mejía, Pérez‐Sancho & Peinado, ; Romera, Cano, Garcia‐Fernandez & Ortega‐Ruiz, ). However, the overlap between both roles – victimization and aggression – is much more frequent in cyberbullying than in traditional bullying (Mishna, Khoury‐Kassabri, Gadalla & Daciuk, ) and Bully‐Victim has been identified as the most prevalent role in many studies (Festl, Vogelgesang, Scharkow & Quandt, ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The reason is that two‐dimensional instruments detect the overlap between victimization and aggression, thereby yielding the new category of Bully‐Victim. This category has been addressed both in traditional bullying (Austin & Joseph, ; Leiner, Dwivedi, Villanos, Singh, Blunk & Peinado, ; Valdebenito, Ttofi, Eisner & Gaffney, ) and in cyberbullying (Buelga, Martínez‐Ferrer & Cava, ; Gámez‐Guadix, Gini & Calvete, ; González‐Cabrera, Calvete, León‐Mejía, Pérez‐Sancho & Peinado, ; Romera, Cano, Garcia‐Fernandez & Ortega‐Ruiz, ). However, the overlap between both roles – victimization and aggression – is much more frequent in cyberbullying than in traditional bullying (Mishna, Khoury‐Kassabri, Gadalla & Daciuk, ) and Bully‐Victim has been identified as the most prevalent role in many studies (Festl, Vogelgesang, Scharkow & Quandt, ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…School bullying has received a lot of attention since the 1970s and the number of projects on the topic has increased exponentially (Zych, Ortega-Ruiz, & Del Rey, 2015a). This expansion in research contributed to a better understanding of the detrimental effects of school bullying on the psychosocial development of children both concurrently (Gini & Pozzolli, 2009;Valdebenito, Ttofi, Eisner, & Gaffney, 2017) and longitudinally (Ttofi, Farrington, & Losel, 2012;Ttofi, Farrington, L€ osel, & Loeber, 2011). There is also now a better understanding of factors that predict children's involvement in bullying as perpetrators, victims, or bully/victims (Cook, Williams, Guerra, Kim, & Sadek, 2010;Zych, Farrington, & Ttofi, 2019).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The mere presence of guns can also increase the likelihood of aggressive responding in social situations (Berkowitz & LePage, ). Social exclusion and isolation. Being regularly victimized or ostracized by peers is also a risk factor for youth violence (Raitanen, Sandberg, & Oksanen, ; Valdebenito, Ttofi, Eisner, & Gaffney, ). This may lead individuals to feel socially isolated, with little access to a support system that could otherwise be protective against violent behavior.…”
Section: Environmental Risk Factors For Youth Violencementioning
confidence: 99%