Jeong Seokjin, Davis Jaya, Han Youngsun
University of Texas, Arlington, TX, USA.
Crim Behav Ment Health. 2015 Apr;25(2):141-55. doi: 10.1002/cbm.1919. Epub 2014 Jun 9.
Mainly Western studies suggest that bullying increases risk of subsequent offending. Less is known about risk of violence specifically. Very little such research is from Asia - none from Korea.
This study aimed to answer three research questions: Is being a victim of bullying in Korean schools associated with later perpetration of violent behaviour? Does type of bullying influence type of offending? Does school climate or parental control mediate this relationship?
Juvenile justice intake officers identified 606 young offenders who were asked to complete questionnaires about their school experience, school climate and parental supervision. We used multinomial logit model with maximum likelihood estimation to evaluate relationships between the variables of interest.
Over half (310) of these young people had committed at least one violent offence. Seventy-six (13%) reported having experienced emotional bullying at school and 31 (5%) physical bullying. Violent offending was over twice as likely as property offending to be associated with emotional bullying history (OR 2.38, CI 1.13-5.01), but three times less likely with physical bullying (OR 0.31, CI 0.11-0.87). In addition, parental control (but not school climate) increased the likelihood of violent offending or other delinquency by 15% (OR 1.14, CI 1.02-1.26; OR 1.16, CI 1.01-1.32, respectively).
CONCLUSIONS/IMPLICATIONS: Our overarching finding of a relationship between childhood experience of bullying and later delinquency is in line with Western findings. Where, however, the latter are equivocal on risk of later violence perpetration, we found that being emotionally bullied raises the risk of becoming violent. Our findings also underscore the importance of having studies from a range of cultures. Predictions from Western studies would be that parental control would be protective and school climate a potential risk factor for later violence, but, in Korea, where parenting styles tend to be highly authoritarian, we found differently.
主要来自西方的研究表明,受欺凌会增加日后犯罪的风险。关于暴力风险的了解较少。这类研究很少来自亚洲——没有来自韩国的。
本研究旨在回答三个研究问题:在韩国学校中成为欺凌受害者是否与日后实施暴力行为有关?欺凌类型是否会影响犯罪类型?学校氛围或父母管控是否会调节这种关系?
青少年司法 intake 官员识别出606名年轻罪犯,要求他们填写关于学校经历、学校氛围和父母监督的问卷。我们使用具有最大似然估计的多项逻辑回归模型来评估感兴趣变量之间的关系。
这些年轻人中有超过一半(310人)至少实施过一次暴力犯罪。76人(13%)报告在学校经历过情感欺凌,31人(5%)经历过身体欺凌。与财产犯罪相比,暴力犯罪与情感欺凌史相关的可能性高出两倍多(比值比2.38,可信区间1.13 - 5.01),但与身体欺凌相关的可能性则低三倍(比值比0.31,可信区间0.11 - 0.87)。此外,父母管控(而非学校氛围)使暴力犯罪或其他违法行为的可能性增加了15%(比值比分别为1.14,可信区间1.02 - 1.26;1.16,可信区间1.01 - 1.32)。
结论/启示:我们关于童年受欺凌经历与日后犯罪之间关系的总体发现与西方研究结果一致。然而,在西方研究中对于日后实施暴力风险的结论并不明确,而我们发现遭受情感欺凌会增加成为暴力者的风险。我们的研究结果还强调了进行跨文化研究的重要性。西方研究预测父母管控具有保护作用,而学校氛围是日后暴力行为的潜在风险因素,但在韩国,由于育儿方式往往高度专制,我们得出了不同的结论。